After much anticipation, the
2009 Inns For
Sale Study researched by Hilary Jones of
Inngenium,
LLC was released at the recent Innkeeping
Conference and Trade Show hosted by
PAII,
the Professional Association of Innkeepers
International, in Atlanta.
The study, now in its fifth year, takes a
snapshot of the bed and breakfasts and inns for sale
in March of the year and breaks the statistics down
into several categories by price, size, state,
region, and the country as a whole. The core
criteria is that the property be currently operating
with two or more guest rooms, be for sale, and be
advertised in at least one of several primary "inns
for sale" websites.
In March, 2009 there was an increase over 2008 of
6.4% in the number of inns for sale across the
country, rising to 990 properties. New to the study
this year was an examination of how many inns had
verifiably sold since the previous study. 82
properties had sold, indicating that there is
currently a twelve year supply of inns for sale,
assuming no changes and no additions!
On average, despite a soft economy and a
devastated real estate market, prices on average
were up 0.7% nationwide, though this varied by
region and property size. The increase was "1.5% for
inns in the 5-10 room class and 10.9% in the 12-15
room class. Prices did however drop for larger inns
(17-40 rooms) by almost 2%." Regionally, prices
trended up everywhere except in the New England,
Pacific, and South West regions. Only the East North
Central region remained static.
Another important observation of the study is
that inns appear to remaining on the market longer
with 21% being for sale for two or more years and 5%
still available after three or more years.
The
B&B Team, sponsors of the study, believe that
this 2-3 year time period to sell a bed & breakfast
inn is not unusual, but there is clear statistical
evidence to support this. Additionally, a large
number of properties which are still operating
dropped off the list in 2009, indicating
discouragement with the marketplace.
In light of the large numbers of B&Bs and inns
for sale, The B&B Team believes that the smaller
properties, those that would be desirable as
residences, should focus their efforts on selling as
residential real estate rather than as B&B's. This
will increase their owners' chances of a successful
sale in a timely fashion. Inns that are viable going
concerns should ensure that their asking price
reflects what an over-saturated marketplace and
lenders will find "reasonable and defensible."