One in three holidaymakers will cut back on spending next year due to the cost of living crisis, according to travel industry research.
The travel association Abta said a strong recovery in demand for travel this year was expected to continue next year, but its own surveys suggested people would opt for cheaper trips and cut back on spending money.
Abta said twice as many Britons holidayed abroad in the last year than in 2021, after pandemic travel restrictions were lifted, and were up to 70% of 2019 numbers – which it said was a significant recovery with UK travel restrictions lifted only in March this year.
According to its research, only 4% of those who travelled this year have ruled out a further trip next year for financial reasons – and 61% of all people surveyed will take some kind of holiday abroad. But 35% will cut back on spending and opt for cheaper trips.
The research was conducted in late August, before Kwasi Kwarteng’s mini-budget which hit the pound and fuelled the expectation of rising interest rates, higher mortgage costs and shrinking disposable incomes.
“The current ‘turbulence’ in the financial markets – to use our chancellor’s nonchalant description – is a real cause of concern for our members,” said Mark Tanzer, the Abta chief executive, speaking at the Travel Convention in Marrakech.
“Higher interest rates on top of rising energy bills put a double squeeze on businesses – increased costs just when consumers are tightening their belts.”
He added: “Many travel businesses have come out of the pandemic with less financial headroom than they went into it, so increased borrowing at higher costs is not an option.”
In its Holiday Habits report, Abta said it had noted a rise in people booking through agents or
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