Indian Hotels Company has marked Ginger’s debut in Hyderabad with the opening of a 118-key property on Airport Road, bringing its lean-luxe midscale brand into one of India’s most consistently high-performing hotel markets for the first time.
The announcement, made on 29 April 2026, adds Hyderabad to a city portfolio that spans metros, commercial centres, industrial townships and pilgrimage circuits across India. For IHCL, it represents a deliberate move into a city where business travel demand has outpaced branded midscale supply, and where the group has until now been represented primarily at the upper end of the market.
Deepika Rao, Executive Vice President, New Businesses and Hotel Openings at IHCL, framed the opening in terms of the breadth of Hyderabad’s demand base rather than a single segment: ‘Hyderabad is among the country’s key lodging markets with a customer base across financial services, technology, manufacturing, medical tourism, education as well as is an established cultural destination. This unveiling marks Ginger’s debut in the city. With its lean-luxe offerings in the mid-scale segment, the hotel is strategically positioned to capture the city’s diverse demand.’
A market with strong fundamentals
Hyderabad has been among the most resilient performers in India’s branded hotel landscape. In the 2024-25 financial year, the combined market spanning Mumbai, Delhi, Bengaluru and Hyderabad recorded ADR growth of 8.3 per cent and RevPAR growth of 12.1 per cent, according to Hotelivate data. Hyderabad specifically posted ARR growth of 18 to 20 per cent year-on-year through December 2025, per HVS analytics, placing it among the country’s top-performing markets by rate momentum.
Much of that demand is rooted in the city’s commercial infrastructure. Major occupiers including Deloitte, Microsoft, Amazon and Tata Consultancy Services underpin a large corporate travel segment, while medical tourism, MICE activity and a growing cultural identity contribute additional demand layers. Gachibowli alone is expected to add 23 million square feet of office space over the next three years, a pipeline that will sustain room night demand well beyond the current development cycle.
Against this, most of the city’s existing branded hotel inventory dates to 2018-19, a supply cohort that is now showing its age relative to traveller expectations. The arrival of Ginger at Airport Road, a corridor with direct connectivity to Rajiv Gandhi International Airport and proximity to major commercial districts, addresses a specific structural gap in the midscale segment where newer stock has been limited.
What the property offers
The 118-key Ginger Hyderabad, Airport Road is designed around the brand’s lean-luxe philosophy: contemporary design, efficient layouts and a focused set of facilities calibrated to the needs of business and transit travellers rather than resort-style excess.
Rooms overlook expansive lawns, a relatively unusual feature for an urban midscale property in this corridor. The hotel includes Ginger’s signature Qmin all-day dining restaurant, a fitness centre and spacious banquet facilities suited to meetings, conferences and social gatherings.
The inclusion of banquet and meeting infrastructure is notable. In Hyderabad’s corporate travel market, the ability to host client events and internal meetings within the same property is a meaningful differentiator at the midscale price point, where MICE-capable inventory has traditionally skewed toward full-service hotels.
The property was developed in partnership with Nimantran Catering, whose Managing Director, Pratap Jadeja, described the opening as an opportunity to introduce contemporary hospitality to the city’s growing business clientele.
IHCL’s midscale push
The Hyderabad debut sits within a significantly broader Ginger expansion programme. IHCL’s current portfolio stands at 628 hotels with 255 in the pipeline globally, and the group has been accelerating Ginger’s footprint through a series of framework agreements with regional development partners.
In August 2025, IHCL signed an agreement for ten new Ginger hotels across southern India through a partnership with Madison, the hospitality platform of Terminus Group and JV Ventures, with a projected construction outlay of INR 500 crore. In February 2026, a further framework agreement for seven new Ginger hotels in North India was signed with Rajdarbar Group, adding more than 1,000 keys across destinations including Jaipur, Agra, Mathura, Vrindavan, Hisar and Karnal.
These capital-light, operating lease structures reflect IHCL’s stated strategy of using Ginger to capture midscale demand across a wide range of city tiers without concentrating development risk on the group’s own balance sheet. Suma Venkatesh, EVP Real Estate and Development at IHCL, has noted that the midscale segment is seeing strong demand driven by India’s sustained economic growth and rising aspirational travellers, a pattern that cuts across metros, state capitals, commercial centres and leisure circuits alike.
The midscale opportunity in India
India’s branded hotel sector recorded 68 per cent occupancy and an ADR of approximately US$102 in the 2024-25 financial year, with demand growth continuing to outpace supply additions. ICRA forecasts demand growth of 8 to 10 per cent against a supply CAGR of 5 to 6 per cent over the next three years, a demand-supply imbalance that creates structural headroom for branded midscale entrants with the recognition and distribution to convert corporate accounts at scale.
Ginger, as IHCL’s midscale vehicle, carries the advantage of group-level loyalty infrastructure and national brand recall into price points that many independent operators in comparable corridors cannot match. In a market where the aspirational traveller base is expanding steadily and where corporate procurement teams are seeking consistent, branded accommodation across Tier I and II cities, the Hyderabad Airport Road opening is as much a signal about direction as it is a standalone property launch.

