DoubleDragon Properties has locked 12 hotel launches for 2026, the largest single-year rollout in the Manila-listed developer's history and a 240% increase over its 2024 opening count. The portfolio spans 3,200 keys across Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao, with half concentrated in tertiary markets where international branded supply remains under 150 rooms per city.
The company's hotel division targets ₱8.2 billion in gross asset value by year-end 2026, up from an estimated ₱4.1 billion at close of 2024. Eight properties carry the Jinjiang-licensed brands the company operates domestically; four remain unbranded select-service assets positioned for conversion once occupancy stabilizes above 72%. Average development cost per key sits at ₱2.1 million, roughly 30% below Metro Manila construction benchmarks due to land bank control and modular design efficiencies. First openings are scheduled for Q1 2026 in Iloilo and Bacolod, with Davao and Cebu assets following in Q2.
The acceleration reflects structural tightness in provincial hospitality supply as domestic leisure travel grows faster than room inventory. Department of Tourism data through Q3 2024 shows overnight stays in secondary cities up 18% year-over-year while new room supply grew just 6%. Corporate demand is layering in: business process outsourcing satellite offices and renewable energy project teams now account for 22% of weekday occupancy in cities like Iloilo and Dumaguete, where DoubleDragon holds land adjacent to existing BPO clusters. The company is betting that China-led infrastructure investments in Mindanao and resumed Korean tour group activity in Visayas sustain fill rates above 68% through the development cycle.
Operators and family-office allocators tracking Philippine exposure should watch three follow-on signals. First, DoubleDragon's Q1 2026 earnings call will disclose pre-opening reservation volumes for the Iloilo and Bacolod assets, offering early read on rate elasticity in markets where the nearest international brand sits 40 kilometers away. Second, the company's land bank strategy: it controls 47 hectares across 19 cities, enough for an additional 25 hotels at current density assumptions. Any announcement of joint-venture partnerships or REIT spinoff structuring would signal confidence in stabilized cash flows and create a replicable capital-recycling model. Third, Jinjiang's regional licensing activity: the Chinese parent has approved eight new franchise agreements in Southeast Asia since mid-2024, and DoubleDragon's operating performance will directly influence whether those deals convert to openings or stall in due diligence.
The Ministry of Tourism projects 9.3 million international arrivals into the Philippines for 2026, still 18% below the 2019 peak but concentrated in higher-spending segments. DoubleDragon's pipeline sits directly in that recovery path, with 73% of its 2026 room inventory located within 15 minutes of domestic airports handling Manila connector flights.