ABTA ? The Travel Association has examined people?s travel habits over the last four decades and found that while UK travellers remain firmly committed to package holidays, the type of trip, destination and how they holiday has changed significantly.
Package holidays continue to dominate the overseas UK holiday market, despite the emergence of other types of travel, with half of the holidays people take each year being package breaks.
However, the first package holidays of the past are a far cry from some of the package breaks people are taking today.
Travel companies have responded to holidaymakers? changing preferences ? offering packages that include tailor-made trips, tours that take people off-the-beaten track, adventure holidays, well-being breaks and all-inclusives. Holidaymakers also have the chance to personalise their package such as upgrading transfers and choosing their own room among others.
Interviews with ABTA members reveal customers now often want to be the first to visit a destination or particular resort, whereas back in the 1970s many people chose a holiday location based on where their friends or family had been.
Similarly, a package holiday was often sold with the promise of a ?home-from-home? ? the UK but with better weather ? but many are now keen to experience the best of the local culture.
Travel experts also highlight that ? as people have become more seasoned travellers and the UK restaurant scene offers a wider range of cuisines ? trends of the past such as packing tea bags, cereal, cleaning products and tinned food for their holiday abroad, as well as confusing prosciutto for raw bacon, have become a lot less common. Today?s holidaymaker is more likely to have a suitcase full of tech than tins, as travellers head off on their holidays equipped with cameras, tablets and high-end headphones.
ABTA?s new analysis of the latest International Passenger Survey (IPS) air travel figures shows the diversification of destinations people are visiting.
UK holidaymaker visits to Mexico in 1994 stood at 18,778 whereas in 2018 visits were up by 3500% to 676,734, that?s more than the number of visits to Malta (559,677).
Further, increased capacity in the airline industry and more fuel-efficient aircraft have put long-haul trips within reach of more UK travellers.
Mark Tanzer, chief executive of the travel association, said: ?The UK continues to be a nation in love with the foreign holiday as tens of millions of people head abroad each year, with package holidays still dominating a large proportion of the travel market. But how we?re holidaying now is quite different compared to the package breaks of the 1970s.
?Holidaymakers? tastes are continually evolving, and the travel industry is adapting to the changing demands of customers; whether you want a two week trip around the Caribbean, a cultural city break to Cadiz, a tailor-made trip to Mexico or seven days in the Costa del Sol, all of these options can be provided via a package holiday.
?With the introduction of the new Package Travel Regulations last year, more travel arrangements this summer are likely to be package holidays ? offering customers the best form of protection.
?If you haven?t arranged your summer holiday this year, now is a good time to explore your options and book ? whether that?s visiting a popular destination or somewhere new ? holidaymakers will find that there are still good value breaks available this summer.?