The Black-owned hotels for your next trip: from ski lodges to luxury resorts |


Black travelers make up a robust segment of the US tourism economy. According to a 2019 study conducted by market research firm MMGY Global, Black Americans spent $109.4bn on domestic travel in 2019 – plus nearly $20bn more on travel abroad. That’s over 13% of the overall US leisure travel market, roughly the same percentage of Black people in the US. “What’s often perceived to be a ‘niche’ audience actually accounts for over 458m traveler stays each year,” says Chris Davidson, executive vice president of MMGY.

These healthy numbers don’t square with the travel industry’s entrenched problem of Black equity. While a number of hotels were founded by Black people in the half century following Emancipation – from the Wormley Hotel in Washington DC and the recently shuttered Eureka Inn in Jonesborough, Tennessee to the Julian Gold Rush Hotel, which still operating in the former mining town of Julian, California, the Black stake in the US travel economy is far from flourishing. According to the National Association of Black Hotel Owners, Operators and Developers, a mere 2% of US hotels are under Black ownership. Which means that travel dollars – no matter their source – rarely wind up in Black hands.

A crop of travel companies are making it somewhat easier to buy Black while on the go. From a Virginia getaway dreamed up by a woman who happens to have been one of the most important Black CEOs to a winter sports startup that caters to skiers of color, here are three Black businesses breathing new life – and a sense of fairness – into the market.

Oak Bluffs Inn

A pink inn
Oak Bluffs Inn. Photograph: Hemis/Alamy

Predominantly African-American resort destinations have existed across the US for ages, from Sag Harbor in New York’s fabled Hamptons to Michigan’s Idlewild, which was known as the south-east lake country’s “Black Eden”, but no community is as renowned as the town of Oak Bluffs on the island of Martha’s Vineyard. For more than a century, this tiny enclave has been home to a resort community where Blackness is the standard – not the exception. “It’s the best-known resort among the Black elite,” wrote author and historian Lawrence Otis Graham in his 1999 bestseller Our Kind of People: Inside America’s Black Upper Class.

At the center of Oak Bluffs is the 10-room Oak Bluffs Inn, a short stroll from Inkwell Beach, where Black families have bathed for generations. Co-owners Erik and Rhonda Albert purchased and relaunched the inn in the late 1990s and since then have cultivated a strong African American clientele. “80 to 100% of the time, at least one person in each room is Black,” says Erik Albert, who describes Oak Bluffs as “spendy but not ritzy”. White travelers have occasionally turned up in Oak Bluffs (both the town and inn) surprised, if not shocked, to find themselves among the minority, he says. “It rarely happens, but some have even checked out early.” The penthouse reaches $1,600 per night during the peak-season months of July and August. But the money is there, especially Black money, the innkeeper says. “There’s been a new wave of investment in Oak Bluffs. And people just want to be a…



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