The company said its performance during the quarter was driven by ‘strong’ revenue growth, on the back of ‘higher’ business and average daily rates in key markets.
“Targeted digital distribution and campaigns and loyalty-led initiatives drove revenue growth at key locations,” Chen said in a statement.
ITC Hotels’ room revenue during the quarter grew by 12% driven by corporate, wedding and MICE segments.
Average daily rates increased 9% for the quarter and business expanded by 290 bps, resulting in overall consolidated revenue per available room growth of 13%.
The chain said its food and beverage (F&B) revenue grew 8% in the quarter, led mainly by banquets, with a boost in weddings and corporate events.
The chain said demand remained strong in the luxury, upper upscale and upscale segments as reflected by higher revenue per available room due to festive spending in hotels.
Restaurants, and an increase in wedding and MICE activity.
It includes recent policy measures including GST rate rationalization and
Monetary ease is expected to sustain discretionary consumer spending in the near term.
According to the chain, the infrastructure supply demand imbalance in the hospitality sector is likely to persist in the medium to long term, with demand—especially
In premium and leisure segments – continuing to outpace available inventory. “Going forward, the industry outlook
remains positive, supported by continued consumption trends, positive market sentiment and broad-based growth,” it added.
During the quarter under review, the company opened new hotels in Bodh Gaya, Rishikesh, Siliguri, Sirmaur, Dungarpur and Jaipur.
During the calendar year 2025, ITC Hotels has signed 28 hotels with 2790 keys, which is 26% more than 2024.
The company said it crossed 150 operational hotels with more than 14,000 keys during the quarter ended December 2025.
(You can now subscribe to our ETMarkets WhatsApp channel)
