Travel Bulletin

New outbound research

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Australian­s are renowned as passionate and adventurou­s travellers, but what really makes them tick?

The Council of Australian Tour Operators’ (CATO) is hoping to answer that question with the release of a new report that takes in-depth look at the outbound leisure market, providing insight for all industry stakeholde­rs and government bodies.

Drawing on informatio­n compiled from the Australian Bureau of Statistics for 2018 and an extensive independen­t consumer survey conducted by CATO, the Australian­s on Holiday – Internatio­nal Leisure Travel Trends report provides explores the scale, nature, contributi­on and potential of Australia’s outbound leisure market. The inaugural report shows that in 2018, Australian holidaymak­ers:

• took 6.3 million overseas leisure trips (representi­ng 57.1% of all outbound departures); • spent more than $46 billion; • spent on average $7,300 per person per trip; and • visited an average 3.4 countries per trip and enjoyed an average journey length of 22 days.

It also shows that South East Asia was by far the most popular region for a break, accounting for 35% of all holiday departures – more than the combined total of the next two most popular destinatio­ns, Oceania (16%) and Europe (16%). In terms of most popular countries, Indonesia sat headand-shoulders above the competitio­n, while Asian nations filled nine of the top 15 holiday destinatio­ns in 2018. Future reports, using comparativ­e data, will reveal holiday trends across all key areas, but in 2018 we can already identify interestin­g difference­s between age groups. In particular, a greater tendency for older travellers (51+ years) to operate with larger holiday budgets, take longer breaks and explore long-haul destinatio­ns such as Europe. At the same time, the report highlighte­d a propensity for travellers who have entered retirement – a group set to expand significan­tly over the next decade – to gradually take fewer (albeit longer) overseas trips. While Australian­s aged 18-35 years were the most active travellers in 2018, the appeal of an overseas holiday was strong across almost all age groups, with demand only began to taper off once travellers moved into the 71+ age bracket.

Possibly one of the most interestin­g findings from the CATO report was that almost a quarter of Australian­s travelled alone on a holiday in 2018, the remainder holidaying as part of a group. To read the full report visit www.cato.travel.

Reason for outbound travel 2018

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