Home Business & Economy Hospitality Hotel development recommendations issued by Destination Greater Victoria

Hotel development recommendations issued by Destination Greater Victoria

Impacts for tourism, jobs, and overall economic growth of the region.

hotel types, greater victoria
Hotel development recommendations - Greater Victoria [April 2026]
CANADIAN NATIONAL NEWS & ANALYSIS

Saturday April 25, 2026 | VICTORIA, BC [12:11 pm PT]

by Mary P Brooke | Island Social Trends


Destination Greater Victoria has released a new report highlighting what they assess to be a time-sensitive opportunity to address hotel room shortage.

The report includes recommendations on how to simplify, de-risk and accelerate hotel development.

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Hotel development recommendations released in April 2026. [Destination Greater Victoria]

Some recommendations are intended to apply region-wide, while others are more specific to Victoria. This reflects differences in planning context such as density, downtown development, and regional growth nodes, says Destination Greater Victoria.

Developed by the Greater Victoria Hotel Development Working Group (as assembled by Destination Greater Victoria), there were regular meetings over the last six months. Monthly meetings were supplemented by one-on-one discussions and smaller group meetings. Research and analysis was supported by Cascadia Partners.

Regional application:

Local governments that had recently expressed interest to DVG in hotel development were invited to participate in the working group.

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Anticipated geographic distribution of hotel supply (data to 2025), issued by Destination Greater Victoria, April 2026.

“We anticipate the recommendations will be of value to local governments across the region, and we will be engaging with all municipalities as we move toward implementing them,” said Destination Greater Victoria in a statement to Island Social Trends this week.

The municipalities of Langford, Sidney and Oak Bay did not have representatives in the report contributors list — areas where hyper-localized hotel development has been (or is currently) underway.

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Why the focus on hotels?

Hotel room availability supports economic activity and growth. Emerging from the 10-Year Destination Plan, it was determined by Destination Greater Victoria that approximately 2,000 new hotel rooms are needed in the Greater Victoria region over the next decade.

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Conceptual Hotel Feasibility Assessment with 2025 data [Destination Greater Victoria Report, April 2026]

Why now?

Recent shifts in the real estate market and lower land costs have created a generational opportunity for local municipalities, developers and tourism stakeholders to address the region’s significant hotel room shortage, according to a new report by the Greater Victoria Hotel Development Working Group (PDF) that was issued April 23, 2026.

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Primary reason for hotel stays in Greater Victoria. [April 2026 report, Destination Greater Victoria]

More people are coming to visit Victoria whether on vacation (largest percentage), visiting family or friends (next largest portion), or to do business or attend a conference or event.

During 2019 to 2025, over 60% stayed in hotels for any of those types of visits. Meanwhile, just over 10% stayed with family or friends, while about 10% to 15% stayed in a vacation rental (that particular option declining over the seven-year period).

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Types of accommodation when visiting in Victoria, 2019 to 2025. [Destination Greater Victoria, April 2026]

Supporting tourism, business and population growth:

Greater Victoria is experiencing a growing demand for hotel accommodation driven by tourism, business travel, population growth and an increase in conference business. By contrast, the region’s hotel inventory has declined significantly over the past decade, falling by 25 per cent since 2016.

This is largely due to the removal or conversion of existing, older hotel stock that has not been replaced at the same pace by new hotel development. Destination Greater Victoria has identified a hotel supply gap of at least 2,000 rooms over the next decade and estimates 800 full-service hotel rooms could be accommodated in the Victoria market immediately.

The Greater Victoria Hotel Development Working Group was assembled to bring together industry experts, lenders, hotel developers, local governments, and First Nations economic development corporations to advance shared understanding and practical solutions around hotel development in the region.

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Origin of visitors to Victoria, 2019-2025 [Destination Greater Victoria]

For now, they are likely to keep in mind that just over half of visitors to Victoria are from within Canada.

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Economic benefits:

In addition to the wide range of community benefits hotels provide, the Greater Victoria Hotel Development Working Group estimates the development of 2,000 net new hotel rooms will generate substantial ongoing economic benefits across Greater Victoria, including 1,180 direct jobs in hotel operations, 1,580 indirect jobs supported across the local economy, approximately $85 million in annual wages, and more than $100 million in annual visitor spending.

Additionally, hotel activity is projected to generate significant tax revenues annually, including: $15.8 million in municipal taxes, $15.8 million in provincial taxes, and $17.9 million in federal taxes.

“The city was happy to collaborate and be a partner at the table for the discussions around future potential for hotel developments. This has a direct correlation to our Victoria conference centre and our visitor economy,” says Jocelyn Jenkyns, City Manager, City of Victoria.

“The hotel sector in Victoria is gaining some real momentum—and this report offers a vital roadmap to navigate the permitting system and unlock projects that will meaningfully strengthen our region’s economy. With several hotel projects already in our pipeline, we’re committed to working alongside government and our business partners to make new hotel development in Victoria a reality,” says Chris Quigley, Director of Development for Aryze Developments.

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Six recommendations:

Recognizing that hotel development is complex and comes with unique design standards, operating requirements, and financial risk, the Working Group identified six generalized recommendations for consideration by municipal leaders and destination developers, recognizing that the recommendations will not apply universally across the region.

  • Recommendation 1: Apply targeted zoning and land use policies to unlock hotel development sites • Identify, expand, and prioritize suitable hotel development areas. • Introduce targeted density increases or incentives in priority areas to support viable hotel scale. • Update planning policies and zoning frameworks to allow more flexible combinations of hotel, residential and commercial uses.
  • Recommendation 2: Address permitting process complexities early to reduce permitting time. • Provide clear, up-front guidance to hotel developers and brands on key design expectations related to street interface, neighbourhood character, and public realm objectives. • Update parking requirements to better reflect actual hotel demand. • Make permitting process improvements to reduce the need for hotel design iterations.
  • Recommendation 3: Deliver hotel development education and technical support to municipal staff • Co-fund a shared resource to support hotel development education and project evaluation. • Deliver formal and informal hotel planning and permitting support to municipalities.
  • Recommendation 4: Pursue First Nations hotel partnerships • Promote partnership structures that create genuine equity participation and decision-making parity for First Nations partners. • Establish a commercial engagement protocol that supports transparency, early information sharing, Nation-led decision making, and meaningful discussion of partnership structures. • Support industry development through a shared learning forum for hotel developers, municipal planning staff, financial institutions and First Nations participants.
  • Recommendation 5: Support regional hotel investment attraction • Update the Greater Victoria Hotel Development Prospectus to outline municipal hotel development opportunities and highlight specific site opportunities.
  • Recommendation 6: Establish supportive policy and financial tools for hotel conversion and revitalization • Expand the use of financial and policy tools to support the conversion of underutilized buildings. • Support the retention, renewal, and expansion of existing hotels.
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Coordinated effort:

“Addressing the hotel supply gap in Greater Victoria will require a coordinated effort by destination developers, landowners, municipal governments, Indigenous development corporations, private developers and investors, and hotel operators,” adds Paul Nursey, CEO, DGV.

“I want to thank all members of the Working Group for their contributions to this collaborative process as well as this report, and their commitment to supporting Greater Victoria’s tourism sector and the communities, residents and organizations it serves across the region,” said Nursey in today’s DGV news release.

View the final report of the Greater Victoria Hotel Development Working Group at destinationgreatervictoria.com/about-us/destination-development .

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