Published March 10, 2026

Africa’s hotel development pipeline has reached an all‑time high. There are 123,846 rooms across 675 hotels and resorts planned for 2026, according to the latest Hotel Chain Development Pipelines in Africa report by W Hospitality Group.
The figures represent an 18.6 percent year‑on‑year increase, or 12.2 percent on a same‑store basis. This signals robust investor confidence in the continent’s long‑term tourism and hospitality prospects.

Development concentrated in a handful of dominant markets
Despite the strong overall growth, the report highlights a growing concentration of activity in a small number of countries. The top ten markets now account for 79 percent of all pipeline rooms and more than 75 percent of new signings. This underscores their expanding influence on Africa’s hotel development landscape.
Egypt remains the undisputed leader, with 45,984 rooms across 185 properties; more than one‑third of the entire continental pipeline and over four times the volume of second‑placed Morocco, which has 10,606 rooms. Together, the two North African markets represent more than 45 percent of all planned rooms.
Egypt’s momentum continues to accelerate, with 39 new deals signed last year. Additionally, 33 openings are expected in 2026.
Trevor Ward, Managing Director of W Hospitality Group, commented: “The data clearly show that Africa’s hotel development story is being driven by a handful of high-performing markets, with Egypt firmly at the forefront in both signings and projected openings.”
East Africa leads in construction progress
While North Africa dominates in scale, East Africa is emerging as the region with the strongest execution momentum. Ethiopia and Kenya each have nearly 80 percent of their pipeline rooms under construction. Tanzania closely follows at 77.5 percent.
This contrasts sharply with markets such as Nigeria and Cape Verde, where a significantly smaller proportion of projects have broken ground. The data suggests that East Africa is currently best positioned to deliver new capacity in the near term.
Ward said: “What stands out this year is the strength of East Africa in terms of projects moving forward. Kenya, Ethiopia and Tanzania show some of the highest construction ratios on the continent, which suggests that this is where we are likely to see new supply coming through in the short to medium term.”

Global brands drive majority of development
Hotel development remains heavily concentrated among a small group of international operators. Marriott International leads the continent’s pipeline with 31,782 rooms, followed by Hilton and Accor. Collectively, the “Big Five” global chains — Marriott, Hilton, Accor, IHG, and Radisson Hotel Group — account for roughly 80 percent of all pipeline hotels and rooms across Africa.
Delivery risks persist despite strong outlook
More than 65,000 rooms are forecast to open in 2026 and 2027. However, the report cautions that historical delivery rates suggest actual openings may fall short of projections, reflecting persistent challenges in financing, construction, and regulatory processes.
Even so, the record pipeline underscores the continued expansion of Africa’s hospitality sector. It also shows the growing confidence of global brands in the continent’s long‑term tourism potential.