MMGY's Winter Edition survey reveals record-high U.S. travel intent for 2025, driven by rising budgets, frequency, and brand loyalty.
Publish Time:
2024-12-18 17:39:58
Source:
Travel Daily News
Accentuated by upticks in brand loyalty and outbound tourism, Americans expressed their strong appetite for travel in the “Winter Edition” of MMGY’s Portrait of American Travelers study. A quarterly examination of the evolving habits, preferences and behaviors of today’s U.S. travel consumers, the MMGY survey found that nearly 8 in 10 U.S. adults plan to take a vacation in the next 12 months, a 7% increase since winter 2023.
Americans are eager to explore in 2025, with plans to spend significantly more and take more trips in the year ahead as the average vacation budget climbs to $5,051 and travel frequency rises to 4.1 trips per person.
“Americans’ intent to travel is reaching its highest level in almost four years, eclipsing even the spikes we saw in the immediate post-pandemic surge,” said Simon Moriarty, MMGY Travel Intelligence’s Vice President of Research and Analytics. “Our survey found that Americans are increasingly devoting larger portions of their disposable incomes to vacations, signaling a conscious choice to prioritize experiences and a robust commitment to travel in 2025.”
Additional highlights from the report follow.
MMGY’s Portrait of American Travelers study provides an in-depth examination of the impact of the current economic environment, prevailing social values and emerging travel habits, preferences and intentions of Americans. Now in its 34th year, it is widely regarded as a leading barometer of travel trends and an essential tool for developing and evolving brand and marketing strategies. The travel trend information presented in this “Winter Edition” report was obtained from interviews with 4,500 U.S. adults in October–November 2024 and features data from four generations: Gen Zers (18–25), Millennials (26–41), Gen Xers (42–57) and Boomers (58–76). The Silent/GI generation (77+) was also surveyed, but results are not broken out for this specific generation due to a small respondent sample size. This is the final of four quarterly reports to be released this year.