Close Menu

    Sustainable Travel Looks Different Depending on Your Age — and the Data Proves It

    21/04/2026

    Why More Travellers Are Going Back to Package Holidays

    17/04/2026

    Cream Ridge, NJ’s Edward Granaghan on Pros, Cons of Bitcoin Investing

    16/04/2026

    How Singapore Turned AI Into the World’s Most Efficient Airport — and What Every Nation Should Copy

    16/04/2026

    The Remote Work Destination That’s So Perfect, Companies Are Now Sending Entire Teams There

    16/04/2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Facebook X (Twitter)
    Travel News
    • Home
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    Facebook X (Twitter) RSS
    SUBSCRIBE
    • Travel
      • Air Travel
      • Flights, Airlines & Airports
      • Travel Agents
      • Tour Operators
    • Holidays
      • Hotels
      • Holiday Destinations & Resorts
      • Cruises
      • Tourism
    • City Breaks
    • Winter Breaks
    • Lifestyle
    • Submit story
    Travel News
    Home » Sustainable Travel Looks Different Depending on Your Age — and the Data Proves It
    Travel

    Sustainable Travel Looks Different Depending on Your Age — and the Data Proves It

    News TeamBy News Team21/04/2026No Comments3 Mins Read
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

    Eighty-two percent. That’s how many Brits say sustainable travel matters to them. Sounds promising — until you look at what people are actually doing about it.

    Booking.com’s 11th annual sustainability report, released this week, reveals a clear generational split. Not in values, exactly, but in how those values translate into behaviour on the ground.

    Here’s the thing: Boomers are quietly outperforming younger travellers on the basics. Nearly two-thirds (65%) say they always reduce general waste when travelling, compared to just 43% of Gen Z. Cut energy use — turning off lights, adjusting the AC before leaving the room — and the gap’s similar: 60% of Boomers do it consistently, versus 38% of Gen Z.

    But that’s only part of the story.

    Gen Z isn’t disengaged. They’re just approaching sustainable travel differently — through culture, conservation, and connection. Around 34% took part in tours focused on local or indigenous cultures over the past year, well ahead of Boomers at 17%. And 22% of Gen Z participated in activities directly supporting local wildlife or ecosystems, versus just 8% of Boomers. So while older travellers tend to sweat the small stuff (waste, energy, the basics), younger ones are drawn to more experiential, conservation-led forms of travel.

    Neither approach is wrong. They’re just different expressions of the same concern.

    And that concern is getting harder to ignore.

    Extreme weather is reshaping travel decisions across every age group. More than half of Brits (54%) now say some destinations are simply too hot to visit when they want to go. One in five has already cancelled or rerouted a trip in the past year because of it. Nearly half — 45% — have crossed certain destinations off their lists entirely, as heatwaves, wildfires, and flooding become more routine than rare.

    Read Also  Tui boss predicts the death of the holiday brochure

    The sustainable travel movement used to feel like a choice. Increasingly, it’s becoming a necessity.

    On accommodation, the generations actually converge. Around a third of travellers in every age bracket plan to stay in a certified sustainable property in the next 12 months — Boomers (33%), Gen X (33%), Millennials (35%), Gen Z (32%). That’s striking consistency.

    And the behaviour backs it up. Travellers booked 100 million room nights at third-party certified sustainable properties on Booking.com in 2025 alone. That’s not a trend — that’s a shift.

    Danielle D’Silva, Booking.com’s Director of Sustainability, put it plainly: “Adapting to extreme weather and actively avoiding crowds are now norms at all ages.” She pointed to the broad range of ways people are already making changes — and the responsibility the travel industry has to make those choices easier and more accessible.

    Worth asking: if sustainable travel is already happening at this scale — across age groups, across booking habits — what does it look like when the infrastructure actually catches up?

    That question might define the next decade of travel more than any single statistic.

    News Team

    Related Posts

    How Singapore Turned AI Into the World’s Most Efficient Airport — and What Every Nation Should Copy

    16/04/2026

    Canada Travel Advisory Manipur , Why the Level 3 Warning That Started in 2023 Is Still Fully in Effect — and What That Means for Your Trip

    16/04/2026

    The Last Truly Undiscovered Place on Earth — and the Debate Over Whether Anyone Should Go There at All

    14/04/2026

    Comments are closed.

    Travel

    Sustainable Travel Looks Different Depending on Your Age — and the Data Proves It

    By News Team21/04/20260

    Eighty-two percent. That’s how many Brits say sustainable travel matters to them. Sounds promising —…

    Why More Travellers Are Going Back to Package Holidays

    17/04/2026

    Cream Ridge, NJ’s Edward Granaghan on Pros, Cons of Bitcoin Investing

    16/04/2026

    How Singapore Turned AI Into the World’s Most Efficient Airport — and What Every Nation Should Copy

    16/04/2026
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    Categories
    • Air Travel
    • Blog
    • Business
    • City Breaks
    • Cruises
    • Energy
    • Featured
    • Finance
    • Flights, Airlines & Airports
    • Holiday Destinations & Resorts
    • Holidays
    • Hotels
    • Lifestyle
    • News
    • Press Release
    • Technology
    • Timeshares
    • Tour Operators
    • Tourism
    • Travel
    • Travel Agents
    • Weather
    • Winter Breaks
    About
    About

    Stokewood House, Warminster Road
    Bath, BA2 7GB
    Tel : 0207 0470 213
    info@travel-news.co.uk

    Sustainable Travel Looks Different Depending on Your Age — and the Data Proves It

    21/04/2026

    Why More Travellers Are Going Back to Package Holidays

    17/04/2026

    Cream Ridge, NJ’s Edward Granaghan on Pros, Cons of Bitcoin Investing

    16/04/2026
    Pages
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    Facebook X (Twitter)
    © 2026 Travel News

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.