New Buffalo, MI — At Experiential Capital Group (ECG), we recently completed a comprehensive analysis of all 76 TripAdvisor reviews published for The Neighborhood Hotel New Buffalo since opening in July 2023. This was a full-dataset review, not a sample. What the data reveals is both straightforward and strategically meaningful: guests are choosing 18 West Merchant Street not because it is the most visible option in New Buffalo, but because it delivers something the market's traditional hotel inventory does not — a livable, walkable, residential-quality stay in the heart of a town that rewards exactly that kind of access. Performance Consistency From Day One The Neighborhood Hotel New Buffalo holds a 4.91 out of 5 rating on TripAdvisor, with 97.4% of all reviews rated five stars. That rate has held consistent since the property's first review in July 2023 through April 2026 — across seasons, guest types, and stay purposes. The two sub-five-star reviews are not indicative of systemic gaps. One flags a maintenance cluster that was communicated to management during the stay. The other raises dynamic pricing transparency as a concern during a peak holiday weekend. Neither points to a structural experience problem. Downtown Walkability Is a Primary Demand Driver 75% of all reviews — explicitly reference location or walkability as a meaningful part of their stay. That is the highest single-theme concentration in ECG's review analysis across properties. Guests describe 18 West Merchant as a true zero-car property: arriving, parking once, and accessing shops, restaurants, breweries, and the beach entirely on foot. "I can park my car when I arrive and I don't need it again until I leave." "You are right in the heart of New Buffalo, with the best restaurants just steps from your door and the grocery store right around the corner." "This is my favorite Neighborhood Hotel. It is right in the heart of New Buffalo making it an absolute breeze to walk to all the best bars, boutiques and breweries." For a leisure market increasingly shaped by guests who want to inhabit a place rather than commute through it, this positioning is durable. The Bed Is a Standout Differentiator 44.7% of reviews specifically mention the bed, sleep quality, Down Inc pillows, or Sferra Luxury Linens — an unusually high rate for a property where location dominates the narrative. Guests are not just noting that the bed was comfortable; they are describing it as memorable. "The bed and pillows were so comfortable, it almost ruined all the plans we had." "The bed feels like a cloud and the fire pit was almost just as nice." "I usually have difficulty sleeping in hotels, but the room was extremely quiet and the bedding was top notch — so I slept like a rock." In a category where guests frequently accept mediocre sleep as a trade-off for location, the New Buffalo property is delivering both. That combination of prime downtown access plus genuine sleep quality is rare and worth naming explicitly in listings and marketing. Cleanliness Is
Two travel trends are moving in opposite directions in the U.S. right now. International visitor spending fell 4.6% last year while the country's travel GDP barely grew. At the same time, domestic luxury hotel bookings rose 20% as affluent Americans traded international trips for high-end experiences closer to home. The numbers tell different stories about the same market, and both have real implications for hotel strategy. U.S. Tourism at a Crossroads as Asia Pacific Surges The World Travel and Tourism Council's latest research confirms the U.S. still holds the top spot globally but the gap is narrowing fast. U.S. travel and tourism GDP grew just 0.9% in 2025, while Asia Pacific expanded at 8.2%. International visitor spending into the U.S. declined 4.6%, a figure WTTC frames as a warning sign rather than a blip. The report stops short of pinpointing a single cause but the combination of currency dynamics, visa complexity, and geopolitical sentiment is doing visible damage to inbound demand. For hotels in gateway cities and major tourist destinations that depend on international arrivals, this is the trend to watch. Read the analysis → Affluent Americans Are Rediscovering U.S. Luxury Hotels While inbound international travel slows, a different story is playing out at the top of the domestic market. Data from Internova Travel Group shows luxury domestic hotel bookings rose 20% and ADR climbed 40% as high-income American travelers shifted spend from European and international trips to premium U.S. destinations. The pivot is being driven partly by a stronger dollar, partly by global uncertainty, and partly by a growing interest in experiencing American destinations at a higher standard. For luxury and upper-upscale hotels outside the traditional gateway cities, this represents a real demand shift worth building into forward pricing and marketing strategy. Read the analysis → A New Industry Body Launches to Coordinate AI Strategy Ira Vouk launched the AI Hospitality Alliance this week, positioning it as an independent platform to connect hoteliers, technology partners, researchers, and investors around a shared AI agenda. The organization plans to deliver education, events, and research to help the industry move from ad hoc AI experimentation toward coordinated strategy. Whether AIHA fills a genuine gap or becomes another industry association competing for attention will depend on execution. But the instinct behind it is sound: hospitality's AI conversation is fragmented across vendors, consultants, and conferences, and a neutral convening body could be useful if it stays independent. Read more → Signals Hotel staff waste 322 hours a year switching between systems. Access Hospitality data shows the average hotel runs 5.2 systems, with staff spending the equivalent of eight working weeks annually on what the company calls Toggle Tax. 47% of hotels operate across two to four disconnected platforms. The productivity cost is measurable and largely invisible until someone does the maths. Read more → Hilton launched its apartment-style brand with Placemakr. The new collection, now accepting bookings, opens first in Atlanta and Salt Lake City, targeting travelers who want more space and a residential
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