According to a new report from hospitality technology provider D-Edge, Asia-Pacific’s (APAC) hotel distribution landscape is shifting from a post-pandemic growth story to a more selective, competitive market.
Drawing on distribution data from a consistent panel of APAC hotels between 2022 and 2025, and enriched with early 2026 figures, the report finds that the region’s rapid recovery-era growth has given way to normalization, forcing hoteliers to manage channel mix more deliberately rather than relying on rising demand alone.
Growth is decelerating across a diverse region
APAC is not one market but a patchwork of distinct sub-regions, mature, corporate-heavy hubs like Singapore, Tokyo and Seoul; leisure-driven destinations such as Thailand, Bali and Vietnam; and domestic-demand markets like Hong Kong and Indonesia. Despite their differing dynamics, D-Edge found a shared trend: Booking growth is slowing markedly year over year.
The consistency of this slowdown across such different market types suggests the deceleration is a structural, region-wide signal rather than a localized anomaly. The post-pandemic recovery tailwind has largely run its course, and several major channels were already in negative territory in early 2026.
Three forces reshaping the channel mix
While online travel agencies (OTAs) still account for roughly 83% of APAC bookings, the report identifies three converging shifts beneath that headline stability:
- Agoda overtakes Booking.com as the region’s leading platform. Agoda’s share climbed from 16.4% in 2022 to 20.9% in 2025, driven by deepening penetration of intra-Asian travel and strength in markets including Thailand, Singapore, Vietnam and Japan. In the first quarter of 2026, Agoda was the only major OTA still growing, up 13.6%, while Booking.com (-9.7%) and Expedia (-21.0%) both declined.
- Wholesalers are surging from a small base. Wholesaler/tour operator share nearly tripled from 1.8% in 2022 to 5.1% in 2025, and reached 6.1% in Q1 2026, a 103% year-on-year jump. Bookings through this channel grew 82% between 2024 and 2025 alone, the fastest growth of any channel, signaling that hoteliers are increasingly turning to contracted volume to offset demand volatility elsewhere.
- The direct channel keeps losing ground. Direct bookings via hotels’ own booking engines slipped from 11.8% share in 2022 to 11.2% in 2025, with the decline accelerating to -12.8% in Q1 2026 versus the same period last year. This is notable because direct bookings carry the lowest cancellation rate of any channel and the strongest booking-quality profile, meaning hotels may be sacrificing their most reliable revenue source through underinvestment in digital acquisition.
Cancellations improve but gaps between channels remain wide
The region’s overall cancellation rate improved from 14.3% in 2024 to 13.4% in 2025, a shift D-Edge attributes to wider adoption of non-refundable and prepaid rate structures. But channel-level performance varies sharply. Booking.com still cancels roughly one in four reservations, nearly triple the direct channel’s rate, a gap the report frames as an operational, not just a revenue, issue given its impact on occupancy planning.
Short booking windows and a revealing lead-time gap
APAC travel remains defined by short lead times, the median booking window across all channels was 21 days in 2025, largely unchanged from 2024. Agoda’s window has fallen to just 14.2 days, reflecting its last-minute, price-sensitive customer base, while the direct channel’s lead time also dropped 2.5 days to 17.6 days, a missed opportunity, the report notes, for capturing advance-purchase demand on hotels’ own sites.
One of the report’s more striking findings involves the gap between confirmed and cancelled bookings’ lead times. On Booking.com, cancelled reservations were booked an average of 68.6 days out, versus just 27.1 days for confirmed ones, a 41.5-day gap. Similar patterns appear across Expedia and global distribution system channels. D-Edge argues this means the “advance occupancy” visible in booking-pace reports is often inflated, and that revenue management decisions should weight confirmed booking pace over gross bookings.
Early 2026 is when real headwinds emerge
Q1 2026 data paints a more strained picture than the full-year 2025 numbers. Booking.com, Expedia and the direct channel all lost share and volume, while Agoda and wholesalers were the only channels in growth. Expedia’s 21% volume decline is particularly notable, as the platform skews toward international, long-haul travelers—pointing to softening inbound demand from Europe and the U.S. amid broader macroeconomic and geopolitical pressures.
AI’s impact is visible in search, not yet in bookings
The report also examined whether artificial intelligence is reshaping distribution outcomes. As of 2025, D-Edge found no structural shift in channel market share attributable to AI. Its influence is currently concentrated earlier in the customer journey, in conversational search queries, AI-generated summaries and content-driven discovery, particularly in fast-adopting markets like Japan, South Korea, Singapore and China. The report advises hoteliers to track organic traffic and search-query trends rather than booking share as the leading indicator of AI’s effect on distribution.
What hoteliers should do next
D-Edge's recommendations center on more deliberate, less passive distribution management:
- Rebalance channel mix to avoid over-dependence on any single platform, particularly given the simultaneous declines in Booking.com and Expedia
- Reinvest in the direct channel through SEO, metasearch, rate parity and booking-engine conversion optimization; the report cites data showing structured digital campaigns can lift direct share by an average of 3 percentage points
- Manage Agoda strategically rather than defaulting to it, given its short booking windows and comparatively high cancellation rate
- Treat wholesalers as a tactical tool, useful for stabilizing base occupancy in the 2%-10% share range, but risky as a long-term structural dependency due to rate-compression concerns
- Tighten cancellation exposure through non-refundable rates, deposit rules tied to lead time and forecasting based on confirmed rather than gross bookings
- Strengthen digital fundamentals—structured data, review management and consistent property information—to stay well-positioned as artificial intelligence-driven search and discovery tools grow in influence.
This story originally appeared on WiT.