According to a 2021 Wellness Travel Consumer Survey by the Wellness Travel Association (WTA), the top five “extremely important” things that consumers are considering while making their future wellness travel plans include "a certified safe and clean hotel environment," "a purified water system throughout the hotel," "access to fitness activities in nature," "a hotel environment with sustainable and green practices in place" and "guestrooms with an air filtration system to guarantee purified air."
Just under 2,500 consumers from 52 countries and territories took part in the survey to help the hospitality industry, tour operators and travel advisors have a clearer understanding of wellness-minded consumers’ priorities as they begin planning their post-pandemic travels. This latest survey was designed to reveal what assets, amenities, activities and other offerings are "extremely important" to key consumers as they plan their future wellness travels, what is "not important at all," and "what might influence them most" when it comes to booking wellness travel over the next two years.
"A certified safe and clean hotel environment" ranked No. 1 across the three main generational cohorts (Millennials, Gen X and Baby Boomers).
The overall top five rated "not important at all" were "access to mental health professionals," "access to fitness trackers and apps that can monitor things like heart rate in real-time," "access to nutritionists," "access to medical practitioners for one-on-one consultations or medical testing that could predict a predisposition to future medical issues" and "access to other wellness practitioners."
The ranking was followed by an open-ended question: "What one thing not mentioned in the 16 items would be a wellness 'must have' when you begin to travel again?" Answers to the question generated over 9,000 words. Three of the top themes that emerged were "safety in terms of physical safety, plus safe from exposure to COVID;" "access to stillness and quiet spaces;" and "nature and the outdoors" (while “access to fitness activities in nature” was included in the overall top five offerings rated “extremely important” by respondents, they also overwhelmingly went on to include references to "nature and the outdoors" in response to this open-ended question).
The survey also asked respondents to rank what might influence them most when it came to booking wellness travel over the next two years and results were: Price, flexibility (with bookings and cancellation policies), trust (in the supplier), and destination management (the manner in which local lawmakers have managed the pandemic).
With the vast majority of respondents from North America, 40 percent of the people surveyed were between the ages 26 to 39 (Millennials); 25 percent between the ages of 40 to 54 (Gen X); and 26 percent between the ages of 55 to 74 (Baby Boomers). A total of 64 percent identified as female, 43 percent reported that their annual income was $75,000-plus, and 35 percent travel with a "significant other." Close to 60 percent said they had a Bachelor's degree or higher, and just under 57 percent were full-time employees. A total of 84 percent of respondents reported they participate in wellness activities when they travel, and 61 percent reported that they are currently planning a wellness vacation.
The three-month (April to June) online survey was administered by the WTA in collaboration with WTA Research Associate, Danny Kessler, Ph.D., Assistant Professor at Dongseo University, International College in Busan, South Korea. The survey was sponsored by the online payment platform WeTravel, and promoted by the WTA along with WTA Members and Partners.
Source: Wellness Travel Association
Related Stories
Stats: Sustainability Still Not Part of Business Agenda
Caution Around COVID-19 Continues to Impact Business Travel
Industry Leaders Call for Return of MICE, Business Travel