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BTS are back with the Arirang World Tour and hotel demand is surging

Seoul South Korea skyline

The Arirang World Tour is generating some of the strongest demand signals we’ve seen from a music event in 2026. Here’s what the data shows across 29 destinations.

K-pop boyband, BTS, last toured in 2019. Since then there’s been a pandemic, mandatory military service, and two years off the road.

The Arirang World Tour is their comeback – 29 dates across four continents – and accommodation markets are already responding. In some cities, dramatically.

In more than half of their 2026 tour stops – 17 of 29 destinations – forward demand indicators are running double digits above the same dates in 2025. In El Paso, they're up 200%. In Brussels and Munich, close to 100%.

Not familiar with BTS? A quick primer. They're a South Korean band whose cultural reach goes well beyond music, with the country’s stock market having been known to move with them. Their music is broadcast across the North Korean border as a statement of national identity and on the Billboard charts, they've outsold every act since the Beatles.

The Arirang album had the largest first-week sales of any Billboard 200 album since 2014.

For hoteliers in tour cities, the data tells a clear story about what a fanbase that size does to local demand.

Key takeaways

  • 17 of 29 Arirang Tour destinations show double-digit YoY increases in forward hotel demand, with El Paso up 200%.

  • Supply-constrained cities are seeing the biggest demand spikes: Brussels (+97%), Munich (+94%), Tampa (+82%).

  • Excluding the last night, average YoY demand across all tour cities rises to +7%, with Los Angeles at +18% and Las Vegas at +58%.

  • Booking curves are compressing fast. Brussels hit 91% on-the-books occupancy for opening night by end of March.

  • Short-term rental data is leading. El Paso is at 78% rental occupancy; Kaohsiung at 60%, five months out.

  • Hotel rates haven't kept pace. Nine markets have average weekly prices below 2025 levels despite surging demand.

  • Markets hosting BTS in the first three months have generally responded better on pricing, suggesting shorter windows sharpen focus.

Booming hotel demand for BTS

The markets seeing the biggest YoY lifts tend to be those with constrained room supply: Brussels (+97%), Munich (+94%), Tampa (+82%), Baltimore (+66%), and Kaohsiung (+60%) – cities with 450, 675, 191, 129, and 341 hotels respectively. Compare that to Paris, with 3,670 hotels, where the YoY change is a more modest +7%.

El Paso is the outlier. With just 102 hotels in the market, BTS will play the Sun Bowl – a venue with capacity near 50,000. The result: a +200% YoY change in forward demand. Supply constraints and outsized event demand are a powerful combination.

Where YoY changes are flat or slightly negative, the pattern is consistent: high room supply, stadiums located far from city centers (Boston, New York), or tour dates deep in H2 (Bangkok, Jakarta).

There’s another pattern worth noting. Concert-goers are checking in the night before and leaving immediately after, so demand spikes hard for the opening dates and drops sharply on the final night.

Strip out that last night, and positive YoY change increases across virtually every market. The mean average rises to +7% across all destinations. Even the largest markets shift: Los Angeles moves to +18%, Las Vegas to +58%, Paris to +14%, Tokyo to +9%.

The biggest swings when excluding the final night are in well-connected cities where fans can leave quickly by public transport or car: Munich (+135%), Brussels (+130%), Baltimore (+96%), Tampa (+98%), Kaohsiung (+73%).

The practical takeaway here is to price aggressively for opening dates. Use length-of-stay discounts to pull guests in before the concert, not after.

In Busan, demand sits at +110% YoY two nights before the show, then drops to +7% the night BTS leaves. Munich shows the same shape: +98% pre-concert, +5% post. Across all 2026 tour stops in this analysis, the night after BTS departs is flat YoY on average.

Hotel booking curve shifts are underway

The hotel booking curve is compressing fast, particularly in smaller markets.

Brussels is close to a sell-out. On-the-books occupancy hit 91% for the opening night in July as of the end of March. Munich is tracking similarly, with 71% occupancy already locked in for night one on July 11.

Short-term rentals tell the same story and often lead it. El Paso, arguably the smallest market on the tour, already sits at 78% rental occupancy ahead of the May dates.

Jakarta, the last 2026 stop, has just 7% OTB, but that’s more than 17 times higher than the previous 30-day average.

Kaohsiung may be the most striking example: 60% of the city’s short-term rental inventory is already booked, despite BTS not playing until November 18.

Short-term rental data consistently signals how hotel demand will develop. They sell earlier, making them a reliable early-warning system for the hotel market. These cities need to be paying attention now.

Hotel rates are rising but the picture is inconsistent

Demand is building, but room rates in many markets haven’t caught up.

As of the time of writing, nine regional markets have average weekly hotel prices below the comparable week in 2025. For short-term rentals, that number is 14 – despite the demand picture described above.

These are weekly averages, so nights outside the tour dates will pull the figures down – but the mismatch is still real. And in some markets, the divergence between hotels and STRs is stark.

In Kaohsiung, hotel prices are down 36% YoY while short-term rental prices are up 103%. In Baltimore, the reverse: hotels up 66%, STRs down 33%.

Part of the explanation is timing. The Arirang tour moved fast. Dates were announced on January 13, and tickets were on sale two weeks later, resulting in near-immediate sell-outs. The tour starts April 9, which leaves a short window for accommodation businesses to register the signal and adjust.

Markets hosting BTS in the first three months of the tour have generally responded better on pricing – suggesting that shorter booking windows sharpen focus. But even some early stops have gaps.

In Tampa and El Paso, average hotel prices are up by roughly a third and two-thirds respectively, while demand is running at two to three times 2025 levels.

The early demand signals are there, do you have the pricing to match?

For early dates, the data suggests many accommodation businesses were caught out by how quickly demand accelerated. For destinations in second half of the year the booking curves are already running well ahead of normal – but pricing hasn’t moved to match.

This is what real-time and forward-looking demand and pricing data exists to prevent.

When a tour like Arirang is announced, revenue managers with live demand signals can see the booking curve shift in real time, track competitor adjustments across all channels, and pricing rooms accordingly with AI-driven recommendations. 

Those working from daily reports or manual analysis are always a step behind.

All the data featured in this article is accessible in real time through Lighthouse Pricing. Find out more to make sure your market’s next big moment doesn’t pass you by.

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