
WASHINGTON, DC | Americans are expected to take 322 million domestic leisure person-trips during June, July and August 2009, according to the annual summer travel forecast by the U.S. Travel Association. Although a decline of 2.2 percent from summer 2008, leisure travel remains resilient in the current economic climate. Consumers are expected to take an average of two trips this summer, stay approximately seven nights away from home and spend more than $900 on their longest summer trip.
"Travelers' resilience is good news for the travel industry and the entire American economy," said Roger Dow, president and CEO of the U.S. Travel Association. "According to our forecast, Americans will do their part this summer to stimulate the economy, save and create jobs and strengthen communities from coast-to-coast."

The April 2009 travelhorizonsTM survey by the U.S. Travel Association and Ypartnership, a critical component of the summer travel forecast, shows that an estimated 54 percent of American households are planning to take at least one leisure trip this summer, compared to 50 percent at the same time last year. While Americans are still watching their travel budgets and other discretionary spending, more than half (51 percent) of these leisure travel planners expect to spend the same amount on their summer vacations this year.
"Consumer spending intentions for this summer are consistent with the patterns we have observed in earlier travelhorizonsTM and other recent survey work," said Peter C. Yesawich, chairman of Ypartnership. "Americans continue to shop aggressively for value pricing when purchasing travel services."
The travelhorizonsTM survey also revealed:
While the domestic leisure travel market has been fairly resilient, a more concerning trend is the expected 9 percent decline in international travel to the United States for full-year 2009, including a 7 percent decline in overseas travel. Because international travelers spend more money, averaging $4,500 per trip to the U.S., increasing travel to the United States is the most efficient form of economic stimulus.
A nationally coordinated travel promotion campaign would save U.S. jobs and kick-start economic recovery. Senators Byron Dorgan (D-ND) and John Ensign (R-NV) yesterday introduced the "Travel Promotion Act of 2009" (S. 1023) and a similar bill is expected to be introduced soon in the House of Representatives. This legislation can stimulate U.S. economic growth, create thousands of new American jobs and generate hundreds of millions of dollars in new tax revenue for communities across the country.
CONTACT
Kristy Chandler
Phone: 202.408.2172
Email: kchandler@ustravel.org
ORGANIZATION
U.S. Travel Association (USTA)
www.ustravel.org
1100 New York Avenue, NW, Suite 450,
USA
- Washington, DC 20005-3934
Phone: 202-408-8422
Fax: 202-408-1255
Email: info@ustravel.org