By Celine Wickerhoff
The latest Travel Recovery Trend Report from Expedia Group Media Solutions highlights how the industry and travelers showed their resilience when faced with continued unpredictable pandemic circumstances in Q4 2021. Some of the brightest news for the quarter came from the Asia Pacific (APAC) region, and here we look in more detail at the key habits and outlook of travelers in this market.Â
1. Travelers Became More Interested in Traveling Again Â
Whereas it appears that the arrival of the Omicron variant had the effect of slightly dampening interest among North America (NORAM) travelers and those in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa (EMEA), that wasn’t the case in APAC. The volume of searches made by APAC travelers rose by 35% compared to the previous quarter, and were also up 30% on Q4 in 2020.
Looked at as a whole, this growing interest built steadily over the course of the quarter. However, when we distinguish search volumes for domestic and international destinations, we do see the impact of notable events in APAC. For example, week-on-week searches for international travel jumped first 10% then 25% at the start of October after it was announced that Australian citizens could travel internationally once more without permission. There was also a spike of nearly 50% week-on-week growth for international destinations in the last week of the year, with fluctuations due to offers and flight cancellations.
2. They Didn’t Book Too Far Ahead, But Weren’t Put OffÂ
Search windows for APAC travelers did elongate slightly, with a 3% month-on-month shift from the 0- to 21–day window to the 31- to 60–day window. But beyond that, the data shows APAC travelers not looking or booking too far into the future; in fact, over 70% of bookings made in Q4 were for stays in Q4 – the highest rate of any of the super regions. However, here again there’s evidence of the resilience we’ve seen globally: cancellation rates by APAC-based travelers for accommodation bookings actually reduced across the months of the quarter, in spite of the challenges posed by Omicron and outbreaks in several APAC countries happening at the time.