Donate SIGN UP

weymouth

Avatar Image
dennisb66 | 07:08 Tue 07th Aug 2012 | Destinations
9 Answers
Looks like hoteliers in Weymouth have scored an own goal. BBC reports that hotels are 20/30% down on last year.not surprising as they increased their prices between 300 and 400%.
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 9 of 9rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by dennisb66. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
Really? OK they may have let fewer rooms but they've raked in it on the ones that are occupied. Sounds good business to me
say a hotel has 100 rooms at £100 each... Last year it filled all of them, making £10,000. This year it filled 80 at £400 each: that's £36,000. (Or worse case: 70 at £300: that's £21,000.)

Not bad. No wonder tube drivers think they should have a cut of the Games profits too.
That's a bit unfair. As reasonably local I can tell you no-one is going anywhere near Weymouth if it's not to get to the Olympics. The sea-front road is closed and traffic getting in and out is a nightmare at times. Weymouth usually does a roaring trade in repeat holidaymakers who will have decided to give it a miss this year.
Are you sure about the scale of those increases?
A 400% increase means increasing a £50 a night room to £250.
If all the figures are right, I agree with dzug2 and jno- it was a good move financially
Question Author
Moonfleet Manor Hotel hasn't filled a single room,they were hopeing for a corporate booking which didn't happen.
Question Author
"Are you sure about the scale of those increases?"

That figure was quoted on BBC,whether it's correct or not I have no idea.
if that means they were only accepting a block booking rather than selling single rooms, then no wonder. But maybe they raised their prices more than others did? Maybe it isn't much of a hotel? It's hard to tell anything from a single statistic like that.
A report on Fleurets newswire (by e-mail) says that London hotels had an 84.4% occupancy rate in the first week of the Olympics.
Psst, jno 400 x 80 = 32,000. ;-) dtc
that explains why my career as a hotelier failed, Dickythecook.

1 to 9 of 9rss feed

Do you know the answer?

weymouth

Answer Question >>