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Travelodge in the red after Rachel Reeves' £21m National Insurance tax hike

The budget hotel giant has said that the National Insurance Contributions increase and the reduction in the threshold announced in the Autumn Budget, are set to cost the firm an extra £9m in the current financial year.

(Image: South Wales Evening Post)

Travelodge has reported a loss for the first quarter of its financial year, as it grapples with tax increases announced by Chancellor Rachel Reeves in her Autumn Budget, which are set to cost the hotel chain over £20m this year.

The firm confirmed last year that the rise in the National Living Wage will result in an additional expenditure of around £12m, while the hike in employers' National Insurance contributions and a reduction in the threshold will add a further £9m to its tax bill in 2025, as reported by .

Travelodge also cautioned that it anticipates further cost increases throughout the year due to inflation-linked rent reviews.

The hotel chain's revenue for the first quarter, ending March, dipped from £205.5m to £198.4m.

The company attributed this decline to "softer º£½ÇÊÓÆµ market trading conditions, particularly in Greater London, where weaker rates and reduced demand impacted RevPAR [Revenue Per Available Room]"

Travelodge disclosed an EBITDA [earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation] loss of £8.4m for the quarter, a significant drop from a profit of £4.9m during the same period in 2024.

The company has not released any additional profit/loss figures.

Regarding its second quarter, Travelodge stated that its market RevPAR continues to lag behind 2024 levels, "with the weakest performance continuing to be in London due to softer rates, fewer events and reduced corporate demand".