Market data
Two markets, tracked monthly
Occupancy, average daily rate, RevPAR, room supply and the construction pipeline for Kuala Lumpur and Johor Bahru. Every figure states the month it describes and where it came from.
Demonstration data only. Replace with verified market data.
Kuala Lumpur
Market snapshot · June 2026
Malaysia's capital and its deepest hotel market — corporate demand, a large luxury cluster and a steady international arrivals base.
- Occupancy
- 71.2%
- +3.2ppvs prior month
- ADR
- 410MYR
- +3.8%vs prior month
- RevPAR
- 292MYR
- +8.6%vs prior month
- Room supply
- 41,685rooms
- New pipeline
- 3,733rooms
- Visitor arrivals
- 1.3m/mo
Updated June 2026
Full dashboardJohor Bahru
Market snapshot · June 2026
A border market being re-rated by infrastructure — the RTS Link and the Johor–Singapore Special Economic Zone dominate the demand thesis.
- Occupancy
- 68.0%
- +3.8ppvs prior month
- ADR
- 299MYR
- +4.9%vs prior month
- RevPAR
- 203MYR
- +10.9%vs prior month
- Room supply
- 19,410rooms
- New pipeline
- 2,622rooms
- Cross-border trips
- 14.0m/mo
- +12.1%vs prior month
Updated June 2026
Full dashboardHow to read these numbers
- Occupancy
- The share of available rooms sold. On its own it says nothing about profit — a hotel can fill every room by giving them away.
- ADR
- Average daily rate: the average price actually achieved per room sold. It ignores the rooms that stayed empty.
- RevPAR
- Revenue per available room — ADR multiplied by occupancy. It is the number that matters, because it counts the empty rooms too.
If you only track one figure, track RevPAR. A rising ADR next to a falling occupancy usually means a hotel is trading volume for rate, and RevPAR is where that trade shows up. The guides explain each metric in full.
Where this data comes from
The series shipped with this deployment is demonstration data — synthetic figures generated so the charts render during review. It is not an observation of either market, and it is labelled as such on every surface it appears.
In production these records come from named sources — the Department of Statistics Malaysia, Tourism Malaysia, and industry benchmarking — imported month by month through the admin tools, each record carrying its own source attribution rather than inheriting a blanket claim from the page.
Read the methodology