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A Luxury Travel Bubble Is Swelling
The Straits Times
|June 10, 2025
Unlike the multimillionaire crowd, aspirational luxury travelers are likely to cut back in uncertain times.
When you go on vacation, do you ever treat yourself to an upgraded airline seat? Or book the (admittedly cheapest) room at a five-star hotel? Maybe splurge on a spa day or celebratory Michelin-starred meal? If any of this sounds familiar, you may be what the travel industry calls an "aspirational" luxury traveler.
And much to the industry's potential dismay, you're also inflating an economic bubble that may be about to burst.
According to McKinsey, the aspirational set, defined as those with between US$100,000 (S$129,000) and US$1 million in net worth, now accounts for 35 per cent of the global luxury travel market. In 2023, they spent US$84 billion on high-end vacations, a figure expected to grow to US$107 billion by 2028.
That purchasing power has helped turn luxury travel from a glamorous niche into a major profit center, sparking a race among airlines, hotels, cruise lines, tour companies and the rest to cater to and capture this market segment.
But what happens when economic uncertainty suddenly brings aspirations back down to earth?
Consider the reasons why so many people with money—but not true US$10,000-a-night-suite money—started spending so much on fancy getaways.
One is the boom that kicked off with post-Covid-19 "revenge travel" and was going strong until recently; even as prices climbed, Americans have increased their travel spending every year since the 2020 bust, according to the US Travel Association.
There's also a demographic element: Millennials, the generation that popularized the idea of investing in experiences over things, are entering their peak spending years.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der June 10, 2025-Ausgabe von The Straits Times.
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