Radisson Hotel Group has signed four new Park Inn & Suites by Radisson properties across Roorkee, Meerut, Asansol and Navi Mumbai, reinforcing its strategy of capturing first-mover advantage in Indian cities where branded hotel supply remains thin relative to demand.
The signings, spread across Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal and Maharashtra, reflect a deliberate move beyond India’s major metros into markets shaped by industrial activity, educational institutions and a robust social events economy.
Four cities, four distinct demand profiles
The Park Inn & Suites by Radisson in Roorkee, due to open in Q2 2027, will sit on NH-344 in Uttarakhand. The city’s hospitality demand is anchored by IIT Roorkee and a diversified manufacturing base, supplemented by a high-volume weddings and religious events market. The property will include dining venues, a rooftop speciality restaurant and both indoor and outdoor event spaces.
In Meerut, Uttar Pradesh, the hotel will open on National Highway-58 in Q1 2029. Positioned within the National Capital Region, Meerut draws corporate demand from manufacturing, handicrafts and defence-sector activity, alongside a well-established weddings market. The property will offer contemporary guest rooms, dining outlets, meeting spaces and an outdoor lawn.
The Asansol hotel, also slated for Q1 2029, will be a 75-key property on the Delhi-Kolkata Highway in West Bengal. The city’s industrial base – rooted in coal mining, steel production and Eastern Coalfields Limited operations – underpins steady corporate demand, while religious tourism linked to Kalyaneshawari Temple and Ghagar Buri Chandi Temple adds a leisure component. The property will feature all-day dining, a rooftop bar, meeting facilities, a gym and a swimming pool.
The fourth property, in Navi Mumbai’s Airoli district, is scheduled to open in Q3 2028 and targets one of the Mumbai Metropolitan Region’s fastest-growing commercial corridors. Airoli has attracted multinational corporations and Grade A office developments in recent years, creating sustained demand for well-located business hotels. The property will include an all-day dining restaurant, a bar and meeting facilities.
A brand built for India’s next tier
Park Inn & Suites by Radisson has been developed as Radisson’s India-focused midscale offer, designed specifically for cities where international brands have yet to establish meaningful scale. The group has stated an ambition to grow the brand to more than 150 hotels in India over the next decade – a target that the four latest signings begin to address.
Nikhil Sharma, Managing Director and Chief Operating Officer for South Asia at Radisson Hotel Group, framed the expansion in terms of structural demand rather than opportunistic growth. “India’s travel growth is increasingly being driven by emerging cities that bring together education ecosystems, industrial development, social infrastructure and expanding corporate activity,” he said. “Many of these markets, however, remain underserved by quality branded hospitality despite strong and sustainable demand fundamentals.”
Davashish Srivastava, Senior Director of Development for South Asia, described the shared characteristic across all four locations. “Roorkee, Meerut, Asansol and Navi Mumbai each represent distinct demand profiles, yet share a common theme of strong fundamentals combined with limited branded supply,” he said, adding that the signings reflect a focus on early entry and long-term value creation rather than replication of existing metro playbooks.
The broader India bet
These signings arrive within a much larger strategic frame. Radisson Hotel Group currently operates more than 200 hotels in India, with over half its portfolio sitting in tier-2 and tier-3 markets – a share that underlines how far the group has already moved from its traditional metro base. The group is targeting 250-260 properties in operation and development by 2026 and has set a longer-range goal of 500 hotels by 2030, a target that would require the group to more than double its current India footprint within four years.
The India expansion is also a workforce story. Radisson has indicated it expects to nearly triple its India headcount – from around 17,000 currently to 50,000 – by 2030, a figure that reflects both new openings and the employment intensity of midscale hotel operations in secondary cities.
The group’s midscale push comes at a moment when India’s domestic travel market is absorbing significant structural shifts: rising disposable incomes, government infrastructure investment in tourism corridors, and growing appetite for international service standards in cities that have historically operated without them. Property owners in each of the four markets cited this supply gap as central to their decision to partner with Radisson – the absence of branded competitors rather than the presence of established demand.
For international hotel groups competing in India’s secondary markets, the calculus has become straightforward. The cities signing deals today are the cities where rate premiums, occupancy floors and loyalty-driven repeat visits will be established tomorrow. Radisson, with these four additions, is making clear it intends to be the brand that sets those benchmarks first.

