The Patel Empire: How One Immigrant Community Conquered American Hospitality
From Roadside Motels to Urban Skylines—The 80-Year Journey of Gujarati Hoteliers Who Own 60% of U.S. Lodging What began as a survival strategy in the 1940s has become the largest ethnic enterprise in American history. Today, Indian Americans—predominantly Gujaratis—own roughly 60 percent of all U.S. mid-sized hotels, representing over 34,000 properties and contributing $368 billion to the GDP. This ascent emerged from a unique alchemy: historical circumstance, communal capital systems, radical sweat equity, and enclave economics. The story spans eight decades, from a single immigrant purchasing a distressed hotel in Sacramento to family-owned empires now shaping skylines from Toronto to Tampa. Yet this triumph carries contradictions—between tradition and modernity, informal lending and institutional finance, cultural preservation and strategic assimilation—that reveal the complex machinery of immigrant success. The Patel phenomenon is not merely a business story; it is a ma...