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Here’s how much you’ll pay for a Super Bowl 2023 hotel in Phoenix – if you can find one

  • August 21, 2022
  • Travel

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Smaller chains and independent hotels also are displaying higher rates. Sonder at McKinley, about 17 miles from the stadium in downtown Phoenix, has a studio apartment with a balcony available for $1,367 per night on Super Bowl weekend; the same room is $182 per night Jan. 27-30, two weekends before the big game.

“One of our salespeople was trying to bring a small group for a meeting around Super Bowl time and the cheapest rate was around $1,200 per night,” said Eric Kerr, vice president of insights and development with Visit Phoenix, which promotes tourism to the city. “We know a lot of places have their sites filled up.”

Does the Super Bowl 2023 overlap with Phoenix Open golf tournament?

Enormous interest in travel to Phoenix in February is not only because of Super Bowl 57.

The WM Phoenix Open golf tournament is scheduled for Feb. 6-12, coinciding with Super Bowl festivities.

This double shot of major sporting events will pack the region’s hotels, especially the Fairmont Scottsdale Princess, the host resort for the WM Phoenix Open.

“We are busy the entire week leading up to Super Bowl Sunday with golf tournament guests who have been staying with us each year for more than a decade,” said John Glynn, spokesman for the Princess.

The hotel is sold out Feb. 7-15 and demand for stays around those dates is also high, he said. A search of room rates showed that standard rates start at $699 per night for Feb. 1-6 stays and $799 for Feb. 16-18 stays.

Many February guests are showing interest in the resort’s upcoming luxury “hotel within a hotel,” the Privado Villas, which has an anticipated fall 2022 debut.

How soon should I book hotel rooms for the Super Bowl LVII?

Interest in Super Bowl hotel bookings traditionally comes in three waves, said Jesse Thompson, area director of sales and marketing for Hotel Valley Ho in Scottsdale and Mountain Shadows Resort in Paradise Valley.

The first wave, from travelers who book rooms in the days after the previous Super Bowl, already passed. The second wave is from travelers who book when the NFL season begins, he said.

Finally, the third wave comes from travelers who book as the playoff season starts to pan out, Thompson said. This includes people traveling from the home cities of the teams in the playoffs.

Glendale lists about 12 hotels in the Glendale Sports and Entertainment District that are the closest to State Farm Stadium.

All are sold out for Super Bowl weekend.

These hotels include the Renaissance Phoenix Glendale Hotel Spa, which saw “very high” demand and at higher room rates than prior Super Bowls.

Steve Eberhart, general manager of the Renaissance Phoenix Glendale, thinks the pent-up demand for travel since the pandemic has kept room occupancy and nightly rates high in recent months.

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Can you still stay in Phoenix for the Super Bowl?

It’s possible. Cancellations could occur in the months and weeks leading up to the game.

Some people who book early will cancel if their team doesn’t make it in, allowing fans  whose teams are going to find a hotel, said Eberhart.

“We hope to have some rooms available to be able to accommodate some of these fans as well,” he said.

If finding a hotel in metro Phoenix for Super Bowl 2023 is impossible or out of your price range, another option is to stay outside the Phoenix area and drive in on game day.

Hotels are available for the weekend in Prescott, about 100 miles from State Farm Stadium, and Tucson, about 129 miles. Most hotels in Prescott are less than $200 a night for the weekend, while most room rates in Tucson fall in the $200s and $300s.

Past Super Bowls also packed Phoenix hotels

STR, which tracks hotel data, shared this information about how Arizona’s three previous Super Bowls affected occupancy levels and average daily rates in the months they were held:

  • January 1996: 72.6% occupancy, $114.46 average daily rate.
  • February 2008: 78.3% occupancy, $170.78 average daily rate.
  • February 2015: 81.5% occupancy, $151.54 average daily rate.

However, Super Bowl months didn’t always translate to peak tourism for the Phoenix area.

STR’s data showed that occupancy peaked in March in all three of those years, highlighting the metro area’s importance as a destination for spring break/spring training tourism. February 2008 was the only Super Bowl month with average daily rates that were the highest of the year, according to STR.

Glendale will look to its previous experience hosting the 2008 and 2015 Super Bowls at State Farm Stadium, which opened in 2006. The 1996 Super Bowl was played at Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe.

Reach the reporter at Michael.Salerno@gannett.com. Follow him on Twitter @salerno_phx.

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