Search Travel Market Report

mainlogo
www.travelmarketreport.com
U.S.A.
English
Canada
English
Canada Quebec
Français
Menu
  • News
  • Packaged Travel
  • Cruise
  • Hotels & Resorts
  • Destinations
  • Retail Strategies
  • Air
  • Training & Resources
  • Luxury Travel Report

Travel Agency Execs Expect a “Leveling Off” but Say There Will Be No Plateau

by Dori Saltzman  June 25, 2024
Travel Agency Execs Expect a “Leveling Off” but Say There Will Be No Plateau

Photo: Javen / Shutterstock.com

How long can the spike in travel demand last?

It’s a question TMR has been asking agency executives and advisors for nearly two years. Up until this year, most people have told us the plateau is inevitable. In this year’s (the third annual) six month check-in with executives from travel agency consortia, franchises, and hosts, the answer has changed.

The sharp vertical growth the industry has been seeing is starting to soften, and some segments of travel may even see something close to leveling off, but there’s no plateau coming. The world – and travelers – have changed.

(This is part two in a series based on conversations with seven franchise, host, and consortia executives. Read part one: All Signs Point to Another Banner Year for Agency Community and part three: We Can Survive Anything, Travel Agency Execs Say.)

Continuous growth means no plateau
“We think that the pandemic phenomenon of revenge travel is pretty much over and we’re returning to normalization of travel,” explained David Kolner, executive vice president, Virtuoso.

But that normal doesn’t look like pre-pandemic normal.

“It’s definitely not plateauing,” Jackie Friedman, president of Nexion Travel Group told TMR. “But the trajectory might not be quite as deep year over year.”

Drew Daly, senior vice president and general manager of Dream Vacations, and Kathryn Mazza-Burney, chief sales officer for TRAVELSAVERS, agreed.

“If the question is more towards the demand in the leisure travel space, I don’t see it. I don’t know when it would plateau,” Daly said.

“Given where pricing is and given inventory, I’ll go on record as stating that business will remain. There’s no doubt people are traveling,” Mazza-Burney added.

Growth will likely level off, however, executives agreed.

“When you look at the general population, gas is more expensive, food is more expensive. All the indicators would tell you that there’s going to be a slow-down,” said Phil Cappelli, chief sales officer at Avoya Travel.

“Growth may slow, but it will continue to grow, which is not a bad thing to let everybody catch their breath,” Michael Johnson, president of Ensemble, told TMR. “Will it potentially slow a little bit? Sure. But if you’re talking from an up 50 or an up 40 to an up 15 or 20 or even an up 10, that’s still pretty good.”

Changing customer mindset
Executives attributed the never-ending growth of travel demand to two causes.

First, the COVID pandemic changed people.

“I think that we would think it’s going to happen. It makes sense logically, but the pandemic was never in our world,” Daly said. “More than ever people are wanting to get out and experience the world, and they recognize that time is not a limitless commodity… people are working and traveling more than ever. I think that Band-Aid’s been ripped, and people are going to continue to do those things.”

“We all learned we want to travel,” Friedman said “The post-COVID workforce can be more flexible in where they work and when they work. People can change when they travel because they can still work when they’re traveling, or kids might be homeschooled. Family’s not necessarily tied to just spring break or summer travel.”

All of that means that more people can travel more often, which leads to “nice steady growth,” Friedman added.

The change is also notable in the boomer generation, Johnson said.

“I think as the population continues to age and we talk about this great transfer of wealth from the boomers, how much of that transferable wealth is being invested in experiences? Because multi-gen [travel] is not going away.”

He added he believes that these customers are making the decision to shift away from commodities and products and into experiences.

New advisors bring new clients
The second reason for continual growth that several of the executives we talked to mentioned was the increasing number of travel advisors, particularly at the independent contractor level, which in turn inspire a greater interest in travel, reach more people, and increase the advisor community’s share of travelers.

“As an industry, if we keep bringing in new people who are out there, marketing travel and different travel experiences, I don’t think we’ll see a plateau again,” Friedman said.

“I honestly believe the more advisors we hire, the more demand we’ll create, because it’s those personal connections and the elevator speech and the way they position their value and what they do that draws more people into booking through a travel advisor,” said Alex Sharpe, president and CEO of Signature Travel.

Kolner agreed. “The way we’re going to reach more people from booking direct and doing it themselves is through independent contractors. They make personal relationships that you could never have with the full-service agency of previous days.”

Expect prices to normalize
One area of the industry executives said they expect to see a leveling off is in pricing. Though even here, some executives told TMR they’re not seeing signs of that yet.

One stat Kolner said he follows closely is the ADR (average daily rate) of Virtuoso’s preferred partners.

“It’s already at a stratospheric level,” he said. “It’s like $1,500 a night average.”

While he doesn’t expect to see rates drop, he believes the growth curve will go down to about 10% to 15% year over year.

Should pricing right size, however, advisor revenue – not travel demand – could see a plateau.

“I look at airfares, they’ve been going up for a while,” said Friedman. “Hotels too. So revenues might plateau a little bit if they right size.”

Is the travel advisor’s client changing?
One question that arose in some of our conversations was is the travel advisor client changing? In other words, are only wealthier luxury clients planning to keep traveling and/or use advisors?

The answers we got were mixed.

Several executives we spoke with said, their contemporary business is as robust as ever and still accounts for the vast majority of business.

“That [contemporary] is the bulk of our business,” said Cruise Planners’ CEO and founder Michelle Fee. “We don’t get to a billion dollars with just a luxury segment. That’s not happening. A big piece of our business is contemporary, and a lot of groups.”

Other executives told us it’s the advisors who are making the change, consciously deciding to move their business into the premium and luxury market.

Virtuoso’s Kolner had a different take, explaining how he believes the absence of excess savings will divide the traveler demographic in half.

“We believe that as of March 2024, it [disposable income] is down to pre-pandemic norms. People have either put it [pandemic-related savings] into long-term savings or they’re just back to their normal budget,” he said.

Virtuoso believes that ultra-high-net-worth clients who were traveling before the pandemic and paying more to travel during and after the pandemic, will keep traveling.

But people who were using their excess savings to travel or travel at a higher price than they normally would?

“I don’t know if that client is going to continue spending at those levels going forward. We think there’s going to be a separation of two markets. One, which is the true high-net-worth and ultra-high-net-worth client is probably going to continue to travel like that. The non-high-net-worth traveler is probably going to return to pre-pandemic norms about how they would spend.”

Not all the executives agree, however.

“Salaries have increased from 2019 to today,” Fee said. “And more people are working from home or have a hybrid schedule. I think people have more discretionary income because there’s less dollars being spent on gas and tolls and even work clothes… they have a little bit more discretionary income.”

That money, she added, is being used on experiences like travel, rather than material goods.

  32
  0
Related Articles
Demand for Professional Travel Advisors Will Never Wane, Execs Say
More Clients, More Tools, and More Respect: What Travel Agency Execs Want
All Signs Point to Another Banner Year for Agency Community
Surging Demand, Record-Breaking Sales Characterize First Six Months of 2023
Travel Advisors Face Slew of Headwinds in 2023 Into 2024
Advisors Have to Prepare for the Travel Demand Plateau
Agency Execs on What They Would Change for Travel Advisors
A Few Words on A.I. From Travel Franchise, Host Agency & Consortia Executives

MOST VIEWED

  1. Power Outage in Spain and Portugal Causes Major Travel Disruptions, Including at Madrid Airport
  2. 5 Things I Liked About Norwegian Aqua – and 4 I’m Not Sold On
  3. Testing the Waters with Dori: Do Travel Advisors Actually Dislike Viking?
  4. Beaches Ocho Rios Resort to Close Doors in May 2025
  5. How Pope Francis’ Funeral Will Impact Travel to Rome and Vatican City
  6. Using a Phone on a Cruise Ship Will Cost Thousands: Urban Myth or Reality?


  1. Travel Advisor Appreciation Month Offers Not to Be Missed
  2. TTC Tour Week Returns with 9 FAM Trips Scheduled for November
  3. Booking on Grandma’s Budget: How Grandparents Are Driving Multi-Gen and Skip-Gen Travel
  4. The Best Hotels to Book in Portugal & Spain: Roundup From an ALGV FAM 
  5. Vanessa McGovern Lands at Global Travel Collection
  6. 5 Things to Know About the Brand-New MSC World America
TMR Subscription

Subscribe today to receive daily in-depth luxury coverage, analysis of luxury news, luxury trends and issues that affect how you do business. Subscribe now for free.

Subscribe to TMR

Top Stories
Headquarter Happenings: Gifted Travel Network Hosts 3rd Annual Symposium on Avalon Poetry II
Headquarter Happenings: Gifted Travel Network Hosts 3rd Annual Symposium on Avalon Poetry II

GTN is keeping its momentum going in the luxury space by offering coaching and partnership opportunities to its advisors.

The Top 11 Hottest Adventure Tours of 2025 (So Far)
The Top 11 Hottest Adventure Tours of 2025 (So Far)

Top tour operators talk their best-selling products for 2025.

4 Qualifying Questions Travel Advisors Should Ask Clients with Autism
4 Qualifying Questions Travel Advisors Should Ask Clients with Autism

Advice for selling accessible travel to neurodivergent customers, from the experts.

Gifted Travel Network on Trevello Deal: ‘Philosophy Was So Aligned’
Gifted Travel Network on Trevello Deal: ‘Philosophy Was So Aligned’

Though GTN was not looking for a buyer, Trevello’s new compensation model and common ideals helped seal the deal.

Travel Guard Releases Enhanced Self-Service Tool for Travel Advisors
Travel Guard Releases Enhanced Self-Service Tool for Travel Advisors

The enhanced version features a more intuitive, self-service experience.

InteleTravel Acquires Tickitto, Adding Ticketed Events & Experiences to Brand Portfolio
InteleTravel Acquires Tickitto, Adding Ticketed Events & Experiences to Brand Portfolio

The acquisition gives advisors booking access to tickets for concerts, NFL games, F1 races, and more.

TMR OUTLOOKS & WHITE PAPERS
View All
industry spotlight
https://img.youtube.com/vi/TVZhtAkFzW8/0.jpg
How ALG Vacations Is Redefining Travel Advisor Appreciation in 2025
Advertiser's Voice
We Celebrate YOU
About Travel Market Report Mission Meet the Team Advisory Board Advertise Syndication Guidelines
TMR Resources Calendar of Events Outlook/Whitepapers Previous Sponsored Articles Previous This Week Articles
Subscribe to TMR
Select Language
Do You Have an Idea Email
editor@travelmarketreport.com
Give Us a Call
1-(516) 730-3097
Drop Us a Note
Travel Market Report
71 Audrey Ave, Oyster Bay, NY 11771
© 2005 - 2025 Travel Market Report, an American Marketing Group Inc. Company All Rights Reserved | Terms and Conditions
Cookie Policy Privacy Policy Manage cookie preferences