
JHR intends to renovate the recently acquired Hyatt Regency Tokyo
Japan Hotel REIT grew its distributions by 28.5 percent in 2025 as the country’s largest hospitality trust rode a surge in inbound travel and stronger hotel operations.
Distribution per unit rose to JPY 5,061 for the year to the end of December, up from JPY 3,937 a year earlier, driven by a jump in variable-rent income, contributions from recent acquisitions and a one-off gain on the sale of a Fukuoka hotel, according to results released Tuesday by Tokyo-listed JHR, which is managed by a unit of Singapore’s SC Capital Partners.
The performance was supported by the purchase of the 1,053-key Hilton Fukuoka Sea Hawk last February, alongside rent revisions and rebranding initiatives at existing assets. Variable rent accounted for 54.1 percent of revenue in 2025, up from 50.2 percent the previous year, reflecting stronger room rates and occupancy across the 52-asset portfolio.
“The hotel market in Japan continues to grow, driven by robust domestic accommodation demand and expanding inbound demand,” the trust’s manager said.
More Growth Seen
JHR’s net income surged 48.6 percent year-on-year to JPY 27.1 billion as operating revenue climbed 36.1 percent to JPY 45.6 billion. Revenue per available room at the REIT’s variable-rent hotels rose 6.9 percent year-on-year to JPY 17,336 as inbound demand and pricing power strengthened.

Suchad Chiaranussati, chairman and founder of JHR sponsor SC Capital Partners
Looking ahead, the manager forecasts distribution per unit of JPY 5,177 for 2026, with growth expected to continue despite dilution from the trust’s recent JPY 62 billion equity offering, as gains from acquisitions and internal improvements offset the impact.
A key driver of the positive outlook is the REIT’s JPY 126 billion acquisition of the Hyatt Regency Tokyo, completed this month with help from the equity raise. The purchase of the 712-key property in Shinjuku from KKR and Gaw Capital Partners was executed at a discount to the JPY 156 billion appraisal value.
“The hotel was acquired during its recovery phase, following a major renovation by the seller, enabling an attractive price relative to appraisal,” the manager said.
JHR plans to make additional enhancements to the hotel through targeted capital expenditure, including a JPY 1.5 billion renovation programme starting next year that will add rooms and reconfigure existing layouts to improve profitability.
The REIT expects the Hyatt Regency Tokyo to generate net operating income of more than JPY 7 billion on an annualised basis in 2026, with yields to rise further after the renovation.
Inbound Drives Demand
Japan’s hotel sector continues to benefit from a tourism rebound, with inbound travel driving demand in gateway cities led by Tokyo, Osaka and Kyoto, according to JHR’s manager.
The inbound revenue ratio for the trust’s variable-rent hotels was 46 percent in 2025 and is forecast at 47 percent in 2026, rising to 55 percent with inclusion of the Hyatt Regency Tokyo.
Inbound visitor volumes are tracking above the same period last year and performance metrics such as revenue per available room are forecast to rise further, supported by limited new supply and rising room rates.
Okinawa is expected to deliver strong RevPAR growth of 11 percent in 2026, while Osaka is tipped for more modest growth of 0.4 percent from a high base owing to Expo-related demand, the manager said. Other regions are forecast for stable growth of around 5 percent.
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