In its latest Travel Trends Recovery Report, Expedia highlighted four areas which are indicating how the world feels about travel. Hint, we’re ready to get going again.
Appetite for Travel Continues to Grow
Despite a bumpy in the last quarter of 2021, there is still a tremendous appetite for travel compared to the previous year. Global search volume in Q4 was flat quarter-over-quarter, but up more than 70% year-over-year, indicating that travelers are still eager to get away. In APAC, search volumes were up nearly 35% over Q3, driven by additional vaccinated travel lanes and international border reopenings in several countries, including Australia, Singapore, and Fiji.
Week-over-week global searches spiked around major announcements and industry activity, including the November 8 U.S. border reopening to vaccinated travelers from 33 countries, and during the week of December 27, possibly due to travelers reacting to thousands of delayed or canceled flights.
However, this heightened interest was sustained into the first weeks of 2022, with global, NORAM, and EMEA search volumes even higher during the first two weeks of January compared to the last week of December 2021. This eagerness for travel is also complemented by an apparent resilience in the traveler mindset, as evidenced by lodging cancellation rates, which remained flat throughout Q4 despite the continued and unpredictable headwinds of the pandemic.
Search Windows Lengthen as Borders Reopen
As borders around the world continued reopening to international travelers in Q4, the global search window lengthened. 40% of global searches fell within the 31+ day search window, a 15% increase over Q3. Regionally, EMEA saw the greatest swing toward longer search windows, with the 31+ day search window increasing 30% over Q3.
In Q4, 60% of global domestic searches fell within the 0- to 21-day search window, a slight decline quarter-over-quarter, as travelers searched for domestic trips further out – notably around the holiday season. NORAM, EMEA and APAC all saw a lift in the 31+ day domestic search window, with all three regions up more than 10% quarter-over-quarter.
International search window share fluctuated throughout Q4, with around 40% of global international searches occurring in the 0- to 21-day search window, a 10% percent decline from Q3. Share for the 31- to 90-day international search window grew 20% quarter-over-quarter.
Sustained Demand for Long-Haul Destinations
A trend we first saw in Q2 – travelers looking and booking destinations further afield – continued in Q4. LATAM led the trend, with 5 of the top 10 booked destinations for travelers living there located in other parts of the world. Additionally, non-APAC destinations – Dubai and Honolulu – made up 2 of the 4 new entrants to the APAC top 10, with Sydney and Singapore also joining the list.
In contrast, North American travelers continued to book closer to home, with Cancun being the only destination outside the region on the top 10 list for NORAM bookers. However, this behavior looks likely to change this year. Expedia’s 2022 Travel Trends Report found that 68% of Americans are planning to go big on their next trip, and many are eyeing intercontinental destinations like Rome, Bali, London, and Paris in 2022.
Paris, Dubai, Mexico City, Tokyo, and Madrid all saw double-digit quarter-over-quarter growth in hotel bookings. Looking at the 25 most-booked destinations globally, Dubai moved from 18th position in Q3 to 6th in Q4 – driven by a 40% increase in room night bookings quarter-over-quarter. During the same period, Tokyo moved from 41st to 24th, Mexico City moved from 23rd to 17th, and Paris moved from 12th to 5th.
Vacation Rentals Maintain Popularity
In Q4, global lodging bookings – for hotels and vacation rentals combined – were up more than 50% year-over-year. Comparing bookings in Q3 and Q4, there was a shift in share from hotels to vacation rentals, prompted by the busy holiday travel season and continued popularity among friends and families traveling together. LATAM had a particularly strong quarter for vacation rental bookings, which were up more than 100% quarter-over-quarter.
The average length of stay for vacation rentals in Q4 increased slightly to 5.4 days, up from the 5.2 days seen throughout Q2 and Q3. In EMEA, the average vacation rental length of stay surpassed the one-week mark, at 7.1 days.
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