Tuesday, April 14, 2026
  • Login
CEO North America
  • Home
  • News
    • Business
    • Entrepreneur
    • Industry
    • Innovation
    • Management & Leadership
  • CEO Interviews
  • Opinion
  • Technology
  • Environment
  • CEO Life
    • Art & Culture
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Business
    • Entrepreneur
    • Industry
    • Innovation
    • Management & Leadership
  • CEO Interviews
  • Opinion
  • Technology
  • Environment
  • CEO Life
    • Art & Culture
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
No Result
View All Result
CEO North America
No Result
View All Result

CEO NA Magazine > CEO Life > Travel > The biggest travel trend for 2025? Staying away longer

The biggest travel trend for 2025? Staying away longer

in Travel
The biggest travel trend for 2025? Staying away longer
Share on LinkedinShare on WhatsApp

With TikTok tips to turn two PTO days into a five-day holiday and workers sneaking in meetings on the road, travellers are making their trips count – by making them last.

While the urge to get away doesn’t seem to be dwindling, industry experts say travellers in 2025 are plotting longer stays and finding ways to stretch their time away from home and work to be as long as possible and further immerse themselves in a single destination.

According to Skift Research’s 2025 Travel Outlook report, travel companies are anticipating a 24% rise in the number of trips people are planning for the year ahead compared to 2024. Globally, long leisure trips stand out as the most popular type of travel ahead of weekend getaways and road trips, with Skift’s report calling 2025 “the year of long getaways”. This is particularly true in China, India and Germany. In the US, one quarter of respondents said they expect to take a long international or cross-continental vacation this year, though slightly more expect to take shorter trips.

“Travellers are over the frenzy of taking photos in wildly packed tourist sites or iconic hotels just to say they’ve been there,” explained Julia Carter, founder of luxury travel company Craft Travel. “Instead, they now increasingly recognise that when it comes to travel, a destination only really comes alive when you slow things down.”

That slowdown is stretching to an average trip duration close to two weeks for luxury travellers, according to the Luxury Travel Report by Zicasso, another high end travel-planning company. Founder and CEO Brian Tan told the BBC, “[We’ve] noted a continued increase in average length of travel to 13.5 days, as well as more travellers preferring a single-destination personalised journey, where they can explore a culture more deeply, instead of multi-country trips.” The trip duration increase has been a slow one (it’s only up from 13.4 days average in 2024), but the report adds that 76.2% of respondents prefer single-country trips for 2025, which Zicasso has qualified as a “trend toward depth over breadth in travel experiences”.

If seeking out a quiet café or a photogenic overlook between meetings counts as depth, Skift’s report also hails an increase in “blended travel”, trips that include both work and leisure, which are occasionally referred to by the mush-mouth portmanteau of “bleisure”.

One way they may create time for longer trips to those shores is through the viral trend of “PTO hacking”. Strategic holiday planning to tack paid time off on days that surround federal holidays has surged in popularity on TikTok, where videos explain the best days to travel in 2025 to maximise trip length. Doing so allows travellers to extend their time off, a trick that’s particularly useful in countries like the US, where the average full-time worker is allotted 11 days of paid vacation per year. One such TikTok went viral in late-2023, and copycats are a mainstay of the app heading into this year’s travel-planning season, with search-friendly articles following suit. Travel & Leisure shares how to turn those 11 days into 44 travel days, and Forbes helps workers with 15 days of PTO spend 55 days away.   

“Many [people] are looking at when the public holidays are, and then taking their vacations around those holidays, such as Labor Day,” says Paul Charles, CEO of The PC Agency, a PR and travel trade marketing consultancy. “Airlines are also offering better deals if you travel internationally around public holiday dates, encouraging Americans to travel overseas and not just within the US [during these times].” This chimes with another trend in Zicasso’s report: an increase in travellers favouring shoulder seasons in 2025, spring (perhaps including the four-day week of Memorial Day) and autumn as opposed to prior years’ summer peak.

One such traveller, Colombia-born Carolina Santos, who owns a wellness business in the US, treasures the long trips she’s taken in Nepal and India. “Longer trips give me the time to truly immerse myself in the culture, to have deeper conversations with locals about their lives, customs and traditions,” she tells the BBC. “It allows me to explore at a slower pace, without the rush or a fixed itinerary. The days unfold naturally, revealing the authentic rhythm of daily life in the places I visit.”

By Lynn Brown / Courtesy of BBC

Read the full article here

Related Posts

Italian cuisine becomes world’s first to be awarded UNESCO status
Travel

Italian cuisine becomes world’s first to be awarded UNESCO status

World’s tallest bridge and biggest museum named ‘greatest places of 2026’
Travel

World’s tallest bridge and biggest museum named ‘greatest places of 2026’

The vacations Canadians are no longer taking in the United States
Travel

The vacations Canadians are no longer taking in the United States

The daring bridge that rewrote the engineering rulebook 200 years ago
Travel

The daring bridge that rewrote the engineering rulebook 200 years ago

Travel

Should I book travel now? What the Iran war means for your plans

The Surprising Wellness Hack I Learned in the World’s Happiest Country
Travel

The Surprising Wellness Hack I Learned in the World’s Happiest Country

British ‘teatime’ is a very complicated business. Sometimes there isn’t even any tea
Travel

British ‘teatime’ is a very complicated business. Sometimes there isn’t even any tea

How to enjoy a weekend in Hong Kong
Travel

How to enjoy a weekend in Hong Kong

An insider’s guide to the best live music venues in New Orleans
Travel

An insider’s guide to the best live music venues in New Orleans

How one country rebuilt its food culture after decades of war
Travel

How one country rebuilt its food culture after decades of war

No Result
View All Result

Recent Posts

  • How Will AI Affect the US Labor Market?
  • OpenAI touts Amazon alliance in memo, says Microsoft has ‘limited our ability’ to reach clients
  • Conagra Brands names John Brase as new President and CEO 
  • Goldman Sachs reports a record Q1 in equities trading 
  • Futures dip, oil prices climb as US plans to blockade the Strait of Hormuz

Archives

Categories

  • Art & Culture
  • Business
  • CEO Interviews
  • CEO Life
  • Editor´s Choice
  • Entrepreneur
  • Environment
  • Food
  • Health
  • Highlights
  • Industry
  • Innovation
  • Issues
  • Management & Leadership
  • News
  • Opinion
  • PrimeZone
  • Printed Version
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Uncategorized

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

  • CONTACT
  • GENERAL ENQUIRIES
  • ADVERTISING
  • MEDIA KIT
  • DIRECTORY
  • TERMS AND CONDITIONS

Advertising –
advertising@ceo-na.com

110 Wall St.,
3rd Floor
New York, NY.
10005
USA
+1 212 432 5800

Avenida Chapultepec 480,
Floor 11
Mexico City
06700
MEXICO

  • News
  • CEO Interviews
  • Opinion
  • Technology
  • Environment
  • CEO Life

  • CONTACT
  • GENERAL ENQUIRIES
  • ADVERTISING
  • MEDIA KIT
  • DIRECTORY
  • TERMS AND CONDITIONS

Advertising –
advertising@ceo-na.com

110 Wall St.,
3rd Floor
New York, NY.
10005
USA
+1 212 432 5800

Avenida Chapultepec 480,
Floor 11
Mexico City
06700
MEXICO

CEO North America © 2024 - Sitemap

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Business
    • Entrepreneur
    • Industry
    • Innovation
    • Management & Leadership
  • CEO Interviews
  • Opinion
  • Technology
  • Environment
  • CEO Life
    • Art & Culture
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.