Uber Lands Hotel Deals with Accor and Expedia, Asia Pacific Pipeline Tops 980,000 Rooms as Americas Slips, Record DHS Shutdown Ends
The longest DHS shutdown in U.S. history ended after more than 1,100 TSA officers left, weeks before the 2026 World Cup begins. Friday converges on distribution: Uber strikes two hotel deals, the global pipeline splits sharply by region, and the record DHS shutdown ends weeks before the World Cup. Uber Strikes Hotel Deals with Accor and Expedia in One Day Accor and Uber announced a multi-market loyalty partnership covering seven markets including France, Germany, and the UAE, allowing ALL Accor members to earn loyalty points on Uber rides and deliveries. The structure of the deal matters: rather than building Uber points into the Accor wallet, Accor is letting members earn ALL points on Uber transactions, treating Uber as a recognized partner for daily-spend behavior outside the hotel. Separately, Uber confirmed it is now selling hotels through its app via an Expedia integration, with the company crediting AI tooling for cutting feature development from a year to six months. Read together, the two announcements describe Uber moving into travel distribution from both ends in one day: capturing loyalty mindshare through Accor and capturing booking transactions through Expedia. The pressure on the OTAs and on hotel direct booking strategies just got more concrete. Read the announcement → Asia Pacific Pipeline Tops 980,000 Rooms as Americas Pipeline Falls 5.3% CoStar data shows Asia Pacific now leads global hotel pipeline activity with 982,629 rooms under contract, while the Americas pipeline declined 5.3% to 878,114 rooms. The reversal is significant. The Americas has historically led the global pipeline by a wide margin, and the pipeline contraction in the region is now visible across multiple data sources, pairing with this week's CoStar finding that U.S. construction has been falling for 15 consecutive months. The geographic split lines up with operational reality. Asia Pacific RevPAR growth, the Fairfield 100th opening in Greater China earlier this week, and the Hilton 8-brand luxury push announced Monday all describe a region where the major chains are committing capital while Americas owners are choosing yield over volume. The 5.3% Americas decline is small in absolute terms, but pipeline data turns slowly. The direction now matters more than the level. Read the analysis → Longest DHS Shutdown in U.S. History Ends, 1,100 TSA Officers Have Left The U.S. Travel Association warned that more than 1,100 TSA officers have left during the record-length DHS shutdown, weakening travel security weeks before the 2026 FIFA World Cup begins. AHLA issued a parallel statement condemning the shutdown for forcing TSA workers to operate without pay and for disrupting hotel bookings across the travel industry. Both groups are now framing the shutdown's end as the start of recovery work rather than a return to normal. The timing is the part that should worry operators. World Cup hotel bookings were already tracking closer to normal levels than to the surge most properties had modelled, and a 1,100-officer TSA staffing gap entering peak demand season compounds the risk. Hotels in 2026 host markets that sized inventory and pricing for
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