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08/27/2021

Update 08/27/21: Ohio's Travel Industry and the Coronavirus (COVID-19)

Travel Research Updates

MAJORITY OF AMERICAN TRAVELERS SUPPORT BOTH INDOOR MASKING REQUIREMENTS, AS WELL AS VACCINE MANDATES FOR CERTAIN INDOOR ACTIVITIES

Key findings from Destination Analysts fielded the week of August 23, 2021

  • Even with high vaccination rates among travelers, the Delta variant situation is casting a heavy shadow. Despite 72.2% of American travelers reporting they have received a COVID vaccine, 63.2% have a high degree of concern about personally contracting the coronavirus right now. In fact, the proportion who are unconcerned about personally contracting COVID has decreased by half since May, dropping from 40.0% to 21.4%.
  • A sense of pre-pandemic normalcy has also been cut nearly in half, falling to 22.3% from 42.7% six weeks ago.
  • About 60% of American travelers say what’s happening with the Delta variant is making them less interested in travel right now (up from 54.3% the week of August 9).
  • Meanwhile, an increasing number of travelers are saying they have postponed an upcoming trip specifically due to the Delta variant (32.7% up from 27.0% two weeks ago); those who say they have cancelled a trip due to Delta variant concerns remains at 27.5%.
  • Given what’s happening with the pandemic, the majority of American travelers support both indoor masking requirements right now, as well as vaccine mandates for certain indoor activities. This week, 73.6% of American travelers support the reinstatement of indoor masking policies, growing nearly 9 percentage points since August 9.
  • Using San Francisco’s current COVID-19 vaccine mandate for entry to bars, restaurants and gyms as an example, 61.2% of American travelers say they support this (20.6% oppose) and 47.4% even agree it makes the city a more attractive place to visit (25.1% disagree). About 60% of American travelers say they would support such indoor COVID-19 vaccine mandates in their own community, (17.8% would be neutral and 22.5% would be opposed).
  • A small gain in optimism about where the pandemic is headed in the next months hints at slight rebounds in travel sentiment. With an increase in the number of unvaccinated travelers who say they will get vaccinated this year (32.1% up from 24.7% August 9) and a record 58.8% of traveling parents of school-age children saying they will have their kids inoculated from COVID-19, the proportion of American travelers who feel the pandemic situation will improve in the next month has gained 6 percentage points in the last two weeks to 26.3%.
  • Those in a ready-to-travel mindset improved back to 76.4% from 71.6% and excitement for incremental near-term travel returned to 67.0%, up from 60.7% two weeks ago. Firm confidence in travel’s present safety improved to 42.8% from 36.6%.
  • American travelers open to travel inspiration also returned to 58.6% from 52.1% two weeks ago. Unfortunately, sentiment towards convention-related and international travel did not make similar rebounds.
  • Perceptions of high travel prices are butting up against growing financial anxiety. American travelers with concerns about their personal finances continued to rise, hitting 55.0% from 47.7% 2 weeks ago, and nearly 45% report they are feeling a lot of financial stress lately. This financial related anxiety likely contributes to almost 60% agreeing that travel prices are too high right now — most particularly hotel rates and gasoline. More than 43% now say high travel prices have deterred them from traveling in the past month, up from 34.6% in just two weeks. On a positive note, despite these affordability perceptions, 54.7% say leisure travel will remain a high priority in their budgets and 41.4% agree that the present is a good time to spend on travel.
  • 80% of American travelers still have trip plans. In fact, 24.4% report having travel planned in September, and 23.4% report having travel planned in October. Both November and December are currently above 20%, as well.
  • Three-quarters of American travelers did some travel dreaming or planning in the last week alone. Using ski as an example about travelers’ confidence in the future, nearly two-thirds of traveling skiers who have a regular ski destination they travel to say they are likely to visit that destination this season.
  • Polarization is present but not overwhelming. Not surprisingly, travelers would like to know that they are welcomed at their destinations—70.2% say that they are unlikely to travel to a destination that has a reputation of being unwelcoming. Interestingly, this week the number of American travelers who said they can think of a U.S. destination where they would expect to be an unwelcoming atmosphere jumped over 7 percentage points to 20.3%. When asked in an open-ended question which domestic destinations come to mind as possibly being unwelcoming, New York, California, Texas and Florida topped the list. Nevertheless—and despite these destinations’ pandemic-related associations —Florida, New York, California, Las Vegas and Texas remain dominant in where Americans name as the places they most want to travel to in the next year.

COVID-19'S NEGATIVE IMPACT ON TRAVEL IS RISING AGAIN

Key findings from Longwoods International fielded August 24, 2021

  • Almost two-thirds (59%) of American travelers now indicate they are changing travel plans due to the pandemic, which is up 16 points in just two months and back to levels not seen since the beginning of March 2021.
  • While the Delta variant has directly caused more than one-third of American travelers to postpone travel (35%), it has not completely deterred Americans from planning travel, as 88% still report having travel plans in the next six months. This is a consistent level that has been recorded this summer.
  • As kids return back to school and the prevalence of Delta rises, there is a small decline in travel plans in less than 30 days (3%), countered by a similar increase in longer term travel plans within the next three to six months.
  • There still is a small spike in just the past two weeks of travelers indicating that concerns about either financial security (+3%) and transportation costs (+5%) are impacting their travel plans. At 26% and 23% respectively, these are still relatively low numbers, but represent the highest levels of concern that have been seen this year on these two factors. The fact that many have spent their stimulus checks may be key factors for this.
  • Overall, visitors are less inclined to take guidance from their state government that it is safe to travel than they are from federal leadership and agency sources.
  • Destinations should adjust marketing strategies to the fluctuations in traveler sentiment to support a safe and profitable fall travel season.

Travel Research Round-Up

View the latest trends and traveler sentiments in this one-page research summary. 

  Travel Research Roundup

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