
Luxury Boom: Accor expands in India as rising prosperity fuels hotel demand
'India's hospitality industry is at an inflection point. The market is changing and also continuing to grow post the pandemic and we want to be at the forefront of this opportunity," Gaurav Bhushan, global CEO of Accor's lifestyle and leisure brands and co-CEO of its Ennismore Hotels, who is visiting India this week, told Mint.
As the market is expanding, the French hospitality giant has also seen a sharp acceleration in its luxury portfolio, with primarily domestic travellers now driving demand. 'When we first began to develop our top luxury brands in India, such as Fairmont and Raffles, 7-8 years ago, we expected at least half of the demand to come from international travellers.
Also Read: Gen Z wants more than cricket from sports entertainment, looks for engagement
Today, however, that has shifted dramatically with 80 to 90% of the demand now coming from domestic travellers. That tells you how the market is growing. Indians are willing to pay for top quality luxury hotels," Bhushan said.
"Today the domestic demand lies everywhere - from economy to ultra-luxury travel, and travellers are looking for experiences," he added. Last month, it opened a 440-room Fairmont Hotel in Mumbai.
He said that the increase in hotel prices across the industry reflects the growing ability of the consumers to pay for higher-quality hotels. "There are so many boutique hotel concepts coming up in India and many of them are charging anything between ₹20,00-40,000 a night and travellers are willing to pay for these," added Bhushan. The company's revenue in the India market has been "consistently growing at double digits" for the past two years.
With around 40 brands in its global portfolio, he said Accor's intent is 'to become the most extensive global hospitality company in India" over the next decade or so. Today, the country is a top 5-6 market for the company globally and Bhushan said the country is likely to become a top-3 market around the world in the next decade.
In the next five years, by 2030, India's organised hotel industry is expected to grow from 200,000 branded hotel rooms to about 300,000.
Also Read: Tour plans to Turkey, Azerbaijan off the table as Indians mark their protest
Accor, whose most popular brand in India is Novotel, is one of the few companies to have invested in the country's hotel market. Along with InterGlobe Aviation, it invested in creating an entity back in 2004, Interglobe Hotels which was designed to develop budget hotels under the Ibis brands.
This was a significant development as most international hotel management companies, with a few exceptions, that are present in the country generally only come in as operators of hotels and don't tend to invest money. 'India is now on top of the global priority for us. We have a tried and tested, incredibly great relationship with InterGlobe, now's the time to put it all together and put this on turbo charge. IndiGo, too, has changed substantially as an airline in the last two decades," Bhushan said.
The two have an investment split of 60:40 in real estate and 70:30 in operations, with a larger chunk of the investment coming from Accor. The other hotel company that has invested in India is Hyatt Hotels Corporation's owners into India's Juniper Hotels. Mint reported last month that Marriott International is also set to invest in domestic player Concept Hospitality.
Also read: Marriott International set to invest in Concept Hospitality, marking a shift in strategy
Newer brands coming in
In future, it will also bring its Ennismore lifestyle brands and restaurant concepts to India as part of this push. This is a global lifestyle hospitality company that Accor acquired in 2021.
'This brand and group of hotels also has restaurants and those concepts too will be brought here," he said. In the same complex as the Fairmont Mumbai, Accor also plans to open its Morgan Originals property with about 110 rooms, which comes under the Ennismore portfolio. Next, it will add brands like Mama Shelter and Hoxton, which are both lifestyle hotel brands from around the world.
As part of its expansion in the budget and mid-market space, Accor and InterGlobe are forming a new entity, which will be chaired by Bhushan, in partnership with Treebo. While the company itself will continue to focus on developing large-format hotels in primary tier I markets, Treebo will help scale smaller franchised hotels under Mercure and Ibis brands in tier 2 and 3 cities. 'We will focus on large assets in primary locations. While Treebo has the bandwidth and expertise to go for smaller hotels in tier 2, tier 3 markets. So, it's very complementary," Bhushan said.
Accor currently operates 72 hotels in India, including 30 with InterGlobe, with a total of 13,000 rooms. It has 40 more in the development pipeline. Ennismore, too, will be part of the new InterGlobe Accor venture. To be sure, all its brands in India will be managed by the joint venture.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
4 hours ago
- Time of India
Cultural evening at Alliance Française
T'puram: Exploring education, culture and flavours of France, Alliance Française de Trivandrum has invited students and culture enthusiasts to 'France: Your Next Chapter' on Saturday evening for a vibrant event that showcases the many paths Indian youth can take to study, work and live in France. A visiting French delegation will present opportunities such as higher education, volunteering programmes and English teaching assistants (TAPIF), through both online and offline sessions. The event also features an alumni meet, where attendees can interact with former students and professionals who lived in France and hear about their real-life experiences — from academic life and careers to culture shocks and personal growth. The evening will continue with a French food tasting session by Ann Mary, Le Cordon Bleu alumna and founder of Elize Patisserie, offering a delightful spread of sweet and savoury French treats. The event will conclude with a film screening at 6pm of The Path of Excellence by Frédéric Mermoud — a powerful story about ambition, education and resilience. Entry is free and open to all and the venue is Alliance Française de Trivandrum, Vazhuthacaud.


Time of India
5 hours ago
- Time of India
PhonePe's Indus Appstore to come preloaded on Alcatel smartphones as part of new partnership
French consumer technology brand Alcatel's smartphone will come pre-loaded with indigenously developed PhonePe's Indus Appstore under an agreement signed between the two companies, a joint statement said on Monday. PhonePe's Indus Appstore has a catalogue of verified mobile apps and games across 45 categories. It supports 12 Indian languages, enables voice search in 10 regional languages, and features a video-led app discovery experience that allows users to preview apps before downloading them. "Indus Appstore... announced a strategic OEM partnership with Alcatel, a French consumer technology brand. As part of this long-term partnership, Indus Appstore will come pre-installed as an app store on all Alcatel smartphones in India," the statement said. Alcatel is a trademark of Nokia used under licence by Chinese firm TCL Communication . NxtCell India holds exclusive brand authorisation from TCL to represent and operate the "Alcatel" brand in India and select international markets. "This collaboration enables Alcatel users to discover and experience apps through a homegrown platform that delivers true localisation and personalisation. This partnership also expands Indus Appstore's reach while providing developers and marketers opportunities to showcase their apps and connect with more users across India," Indus Appstore,Chief Business Officer, Priya M Narasimhan said. Alcatel has re-entered India's smartphone market after a seven-year hiatus and looks to become one of the top three smartphone brands in the country within the next three years. "As we prepare to reintroduce Alcatel smartphones to the Indian market, our focus is on creating meaningful differentiation through localized innovation. Partnering with PhonePe's Indus Appstore allows us to deliver a digital experience tailored to Indian preferences right from the first boot. They have been an integral part of our journey since the beginning, and we look forward to a long-term partnership," NxtCell India Chief Business Officer Atul Vivek said.


Economic Times
6 hours ago
- Economic Times
Handful of groups investing in India; low consumption growth a concern: Parth Jindal
Synopsis Parth Jindal of JSW Group highlights that only a few companies are currently investing in India. He emphasizes the need for broader participation in private capital expenditure. JSW Group plans to invest USD 50 billion in the next five years, showcasing its confidence in India's growth potential. PTI JSW Paints MD Parth Jindal Only a "handful" of corporates are investing in India, JSW Group scion Parth Jindal said on Monday, stressing the need for "democratisation" when it comes to private capital expenditure. The Mumbai-headquartered group having interest in cement, steel, ports and sports, believes in India's growth potential and will invest USD 50 billion over the next five years, the 35-year-old Parth, the son of Sajjan Jindal, told reporters here. "You have today a handful of groups investing in India. We need it to be more democratised. We need more MSMEs to invest. We need everyone to invest," Jindal, the managing director of the USD 49 billion group's cement and paints arms, told reporters here. It can be noted that some other industry captains, including billionaire banker Uday Kotak, have expressed concerns around investments getting done by a few groupings in the past. The JSW Group is investing across its businesses, Jindal said, pointing out that while his father Sajjan Jindal -- the group chairman and managing director -- has announced investing USD 60 billion over five years, group executives are pegging it at USD 40 billion and he himself feels it will be USD 50 billion. "We believe that there's incredible potential in India, incredible potential to export from India as well. And also really... in the China plus one strategy," the Jindal family scion said. Other private companies have opted deleverage or paying off their loans over investment in capacity addition, which is more sought after for the growth impetus it gives, Jindal said. Private companies have strong balance sheets, but they are not investing, he rued, adding that the government is also "perplexed" about this phenomenon because the fundamentals of the economy are very strong. Stating that manufacturing in India needs to go up, Jindal pointed to challenges around land acquisition and labour laws being a deterrent to invest. "(there are) so many laws, so many rules... tribal land, SC (Scheduled Caste) land, ST (Scheduled Tribe) land, OBC (Other Backward Classes) land. I mean, it's very difficult for any foreign company to come and understand or even a startup to come and think about it. So, that needs reform," Jindal said. The government has done a lot of reform, and its arms like the Niti Aayog are looking into how this can be reversed. Jindal also flagged concerns around the sagging consumption growth in the country, pointing out that it is a "tale of two Indias" where the top 20 crore people in the country are spending. "...it's a tale of almost two Indias. Now, you have a widening gap between the top 200 million Indians and the rest. And that's a really big concern because you're seeing value growth, but you're not seeing volume growth. And that could only mean that, you know, that this divide is increasing," he said. Jindal said JSW Group looks at manufacturing as its core strength, where it can put up a big plant right from acquiring a piece of land to erecting the facility. The group will list either the e-commerce arm JSW One or JSW MG Motors over the next two years, he said.