The numbers are staggering. As of Q4 2024, the global hotel construction pipeline hit an all-time record of 15,820 projects representing 2,438,189 rooms. The U.S. alone reached an all-time high of 6,378 projects. Behind these headline figures sits an equally massive but less visible opportunity: an estimated $12-15 billion in deferred Property Improvement Plan (PIP) work that accumulated during the pandemic years and is now being executed at an unprecedented pace.
For hotel suppliers — whether you sell FF&E, linens, technology, amenities, or any product that goes into a guest room — this renovation wave represents the largest concentrated procurement cycle in over a decade. But only if you understand the mechanics.
How Property Improvement Plans Work
A PIP is a brand-mandated renovation requirement issued by a hotel franchisor (Marriott, Hilton, IHG, Hyatt, etc.) to a franchised property owner. It is not optional. It is not negotiable (in most cases). And it dictates exactly what products must be purchased, from approved vendors, within a specific timeline.
The PIP Cycle
Most hotel franchise agreements include PIP requirements on a recurring cycle:
| Cycle Type | Typical Timeline | Scope | Estimated Cost Per Room |
|---|---|---|---|
| Soft goods refresh | Every 5 - 7 years | Carpet, drapes, bedding, linens, wall vinyl | $3,000 - $8,000 |
| Case goods replacement | Every 7 - 10 years | Furniture, fixtures, bathroom vanities, lighting | $8,000 - $15,000 |
| Full renovation | Every 10 - 15 years | Complete gut renovation including HVAC, plumbing, electrical | $15,000 - $40,000+ |
| Technology upgrade | Every 3 - 5 years (accelerating) | TVs, locks, thermostats, Wi-Fi infrastructure | $2,000 - $6,000 |
| Public area renovation | Every 7 - 12 years | Lobby, restaurant, meeting rooms, corridors | Varies widely by property |
These are not suggestions. When a brand issues a PIP, the property owner typically has 12-24 months to achieve compliance. Failure to comply can result in franchise termination — which, for a hotel worth $10M-$100M+, is an existential financial event.
What Triggers a PIP
Multiple events can trigger a PIP issuance:
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Scheduled cycle expiration. The most common trigger. Every franchise agreement specifies renovation intervals. When the clock expires, the PIP is issued automatically.
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Quality assurance inspection failure. Brands conduct regular property inspections (quarterly to annually). A failing QA score — especially on physical condition metrics — can trigger an accelerated PIP.
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Ownership change / franchise transfer. When a hotel changes hands, the new owner almost always receives a PIP as a condition of franchise transfer approval. This is one of the most predictable PIP triggers and often the most aggressive in scope.
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Brand conversion. When a property switches from one brand to another (e.g., a Holiday Inn becoming a Hilton Garden Inn), the new brand issues a conversion PIP. Our analysis of the 2026 renovation boom and FF&E opportunity shows conversion brands like Spark, Garner, and Four Points Flex are driving record conversion activity. These tend to be comprehensive since the property must meet an entirely new set of brand standards.
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Brand standard update. When a hotel chain updates its brand standards globally — new furniture prototypes, updated technology requirements, refreshed design packages — all properties below the new standard receive PIPs.
The Pandemic Deferral Problem
Between 2020 and 2022, hotel owners successfully negotiated PIP deferrals from most major brands. With occupancy rates cratering and revenue evaporating, brands had no leverage to enforce renovation mandates. Hilton, Marriott, and IHG all granted widespread extensions of 12-36 months.
Those deferrals are now expiring. Simultaneously:
- PIP costs have increased 30%+ versus pre-COVID levels
- Renovation costs rose 6.25% from 2022 to 2023 alone
- Hospitality vendors reported price hikes of 90-300% on various products
- Guest room renovations now cost $8,000-$25,000 per room depending on scope
The result is a compressed wave of renovation activity as years of deferred maintenance collide with rising costs and non-negotiable brand deadlines. For background on how the post-pandemic supply chain recovery set the stage for this wave, see our earlier analysis.
The FF&E Replacement Timeline
Understanding which products get replaced at which stage of a PIP is critical for supplier timing. Not everything gets ordered at once.
PIP Procurement Sequence
A typical full-renovation PIP follows this procurement timeline:
| Phase | Timeline (from PIP Issuance) | Products Procured | Lead Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| Phase 0: Design & Planning | Months 1 - 4 | Design firm selected, prototypes reviewed, budgets finalized | N/A |
| Phase 1: Long-Lead Items | Months 3 - 6 | Custom furniture, case goods, specialized lighting, millwork | 12 - 20 weeks |
| Phase 2: Mid-Lead Items | Months 5 - 8 | Carpet, wall covering, drapery, bathroom fixtures, HVAC equipment | 8 - 14 weeks |
| Phase 3: Short-Lead Items | Months 7 - 10 | Linens, bedding, amenities, decorative accessories, artwork | 4 - 8 weeks |
| Phase 4: Technology | Months 6 - 10 | TVs, locks, thermostats, Wi-Fi infrastructure, PMS integration | 6 - 12 weeks |
| Phase 5: Final Touches | Months 10 - 14 | Operating supplies, signage, printed materials, in-room collateral | 2 - 4 weeks |
Critical insight for suppliers: If you sell short-lead products (linens, amenities, operating supplies), you have a 3-6 month window between when a PIP is issued and when your products are actually ordered. That window is your entire sales cycle. If you are not in front of the buyer by Month 5, the order is already placed.
For long-lead products (furniture, fixtures), the sales cycle starts earlier but the decision timeline is longer. Buyers need to see prototypes, get brand approval, and negotiate pricing before committing.
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The Scale of the Opportunity
Annual Renovation Volume
| Metric | Estimated Annual Volume | Source Context |
|---|---|---|
| Rooms renovated annually (U.S.) | 300,000 - 400,000 | Based on 5-7 year cycle applied to ~5.7M U.S. hotel rooms |
| Average renovation spend per room | $8,000 - $25,000 | Varies by scope; soft goods vs. full gut |
| Total annual renovation spend (U.S.) | $4 - $8 billion | Conservative estimate; does not include deferred PIP catch-up |
| PIP backlog (accumulated deferrals) | $12 - $15 billion | Pandemic-era deferrals now being executed |
| Conversion/renovation projects (Q4 2023) | 2,028 projects / 303,330 rooms | Record high per Lodging Econometrics |
Where the Renovation Activity Is Concentrated
The renovation wave is not evenly distributed. Some markets are significantly more active:
U.S. Markets:
- Dallas and Atlanta led all global markets in hotel development pipeline activity in Q4 2024
- The U.S. pipeline reached an all-time high of 6,378 projects, with a significant share being renovations and conversions
Middle East:
- All-time record of 659 projects / 163,816 rooms
- Saudi Arabia alone: 349 projects / 94,287 rooms (all-time high, +18% rooms YoY)
- Luxury and upscale represent 55% of the Middle East pipeline, meaning higher per-room spend
Europe:
- Conversions surged 26% in Q4 2024: 520 projects / 61,550 rooms
- Brand conversions require PIPs, making Europe’s conversion trend a major supplier opportunity
Asia-Pacific (excluding China):
- Record pipeline of 1,977 projects / 402,156 rooms
- India leads with 514 projects / 61,075 rooms (26% of regional pipeline)
- Luxury projects up 9% YoY; upper upscale up 12%
How to Identify Properties in the PIP Cycle
Knowing a renovation wave exists is one thing. Knowing which specific hotel is 90 days from ordering your product category is the advantage that separates suppliers who grow from suppliers who stagnate.
Public Signal Sources
| Signal Type | What It Indicates | Where to Find It |
|---|---|---|
| Building permits filed | Renovation scope and timeline | County/municipal permit databases |
| Franchise disclosure documents | New franchise agreements (triggering conversion PIPs) | State franchise registration databases |
| Ownership transfer filings | Sale = PIP trigger | County recorder, commercial real estate databases |
| STR/CoStar reports | Properties underperforming (often correlated with deferred renovation) | Subscription services |
| Brand press releases | New prototype/standard launches = system-wide PIPs | Chain corporate newsrooms |
| Design firm project announcements | Specific properties in design phase | Design firm websites, LinkedIn posts, trade media |
| QA inspection schedules | Properties due for inspection (potential PIP trigger) | Not publicly available; relationship-dependent |
Timing Your Outreach
The suppliers who win PIP business follow a consistent pattern:
- Identify the signal — Ownership change filing, permit application, brand conversion announcement
- Determine the decision-maker — General Manager (small independents), Director of Operations or VP of Procurement (chains), Project Manager or Purchasing Company (large renovations)
- Time the outreach — Contact 60-90 days before your product category typically enters the procurement sequence
- Lead with spec compliance — Your first message should reference the specific brand standard and demonstrate you meet or exceed it
- Provide a prototype or sample — Buyers in PIP mode move fast. Having samples ready to ship within 48 hours compresses the evaluation cycle
The Problem with Manual Signal Monitoring
Every signal source listed above exists in a different database, in a different format, with different update frequencies. Manually monitoring building permits across 50 U.S. markets, cross-referencing ownership transfers, and tracking brand announcements across a dozen hotel chains is a full-time job — often requiring a team.
Most hotel suppliers do not have a dedicated market intelligence function. They rely on trade shows (once or twice a year), industry contacts (inconsistent), and cold outreach (low hit rate). The result is that most suppliers learn about PIP activity after the procurement window has closed.
Positioning Your Business for PIP Procurement
Get on Approved Vendor Lists
Major hotel brands maintain approved vendor lists (AVLs) for most product categories. Properties executing PIPs are often required — or strongly incentivized — to purchase from approved vendors.
The AVL application process varies by brand but typically requires:
- Product samples meeting current brand standards
- Proof of manufacturing capability and quality certifications (ISO, SQF, etc.)
- Financial stability documentation
- Liability insurance ($1M-$5M minimum)
- References from comparable hospitality projects
- Pricing proposals for standard product configurations
Getting on an AVL takes 3-12 months. Start the process now if you have not already. The renovation wave will not wait.
Build Relationships with Procurement Companies
Large PIP projects are often managed by third-party procurement companies (Avendra, Birch Street Systems, etc.) that aggregate purchasing across multiple properties. Avendra alone works with 2,000+ vetted suppliers and delivers up to 15% cost savings to hotel clients. Being in these networks gives you access to PIP orders you would never see through direct outreach.
Offer PIP-Specific Packaging
Smart suppliers create “PIP packages” — bundled product offerings sized to the typical renovation scope:
| Package Type | Contents | Target | Price Point |
|---|---|---|---|
| Soft Goods Refresh (per room) | Bedding, pillows, mattress protector, linens, towels, bath mat | Soft goods PIP | $800 - $1,500 |
| Bathroom Complete (per room) | Vanity, mirror, fixtures, amenity dispenser, accessories | Case goods/bathroom PIP | $2,500 - $6,000 |
| Technology Suite (per room) | Smart TV, thermostat, electronic lock, USB outlets | Technology PIP | $1,500 - $4,000 |
| In-Room Complete (per room) | All furniture, soft goods, technology, artwork, signage | Full renovation PIP | $8,000 - $20,000 |
Bundled pricing simplifies the buyer’s decision and increases your average order value. A property renovating 150 rooms does not want to evaluate 30 separate vendors. They want three or four suppliers who can each own a category.
The Cost Reality: What Suppliers Need to Know About PIP Budgets
The economics of PIP procurement have shifted dramatically since 2019, and suppliers who price based on pre-pandemic assumptions lose deals or destroy margins.
Cost Escalation Since COVID
| Cost Category | Pre-COVID Baseline | Current Level | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Guest room renovation (per room) | $6,000 - $18,000 | $8,000 - $25,000 | +30-40% |
| Overall PIP costs | Baseline | +30%+ vs. pre-COVID | Significant |
| Renovation cost growth (2022-2023) | — | +6.25% | Annual |
| Vendor price hikes (various products) | Baseline | +90-300% at peak | Partially normalized |
| Timber prices (2022-2024) | Baseline | +35% | Elevated |
These cost increases create a paradox for suppliers. Hotel owners are under brand pressure to complete PIPs, but their budgets have not expanded proportionally. The result: procurement teams are more aggressive on pricing negotiation, more willing to consider alternative suppliers who offer competitive value, and more receptive to cost-engineering proposals that achieve brand compliance at lower total cost.
The opportunity for suppliers: If you can demonstrate equivalent quality at 10-15% lower cost than incumbents, PIP procurement teams will evaluate you seriously — even if you are not yet on the approved vendor list. The cost pressure from 30%+ PIP inflation is creating openings for new entrants who would not have gotten meetings in a lower-cost environment.
What Major Chains Are Building
Understanding what the largest hotel chains are constructing helps suppliers target the right segments:
- Marriott signed 1,200+ deals in 2024 representing 162,000 rooms, with a pipeline of 596,000 rooms. Four Points Flex (conversion brand) targets 50+ hotels by 2026 — each conversion is a PIP procurement event.
- Hilton reached 8,397 hotels / 1,251,068 rooms. Spark by Hilton surpassed 100 hotels by 2024. Every Spark conversion required a complete PIP.
- IHG signed 714 hotels / 106,200 rooms in 2024, a 34% increase. Garner targets 500 hotels in 10 years.
- Accor had 58% of 2024 openings under lifestyle brands, with a pipeline of 1,381 hotels / 233,000 rooms.
- Hyatt reached a record pipeline of 127,000 rooms after acquiring Dream Hotels, Mr & Mrs Smith, Standard International, and me and all hotels.
Each brand expansion and acquisition creates downstream PIP activity for suppliers. When Hilton launches 100+ Spark properties, every one requires FF&E, linens, amenities, technology, and operating supplies procured to Spark brand standards.
The Window Is Open — But It Will Not Stay Open
The current PIP backlog is a one-time event. Years of pandemic deferrals created a compressed renovation cycle that is generating outsized procurement activity right now. Once this backlog clears — likely over the next 3-5 years — renovation activity will normalize to historical run rates.
Suppliers who capitalize on this window will build relationships, earn AVL positions, and establish track records that generate recurring revenue for the next decade. Suppliers who miss it will be competing for scraps against entrenched incumbents who used the renovation wave to lock in multi-year contracts.
The difference between the two outcomes is not product quality or pricing. It is timing. Knowing which hotel needs what, when, and getting in front of the right buyer before the order is placed. For suppliers new to hotel procurement, our complete guide to hotel FF&E covers budget structures, procurement players, and how to get on approved vendor lists. In a market moving this fast, that intelligence is not a nice-to-have. It is the entire competitive advantage. See how InnLead.ai automates renovation signal tracking.
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