• Strong Improvements in International Outbound Travel to Help Drive Overall Spending Growth
  • Group Travel Sees Largest Jump Since 2011
  • Increase in Business Travel Spend is Leading Indicator of Job Growth

Alexandria, VA – Business travel finished 2013 with stronger than expected growth and heads into 2014 with a robust outlook, propelled in part by strong investment in international outbound travel, a poorly performing sector over the previous two years. U.S. spending on international outbound travel should jump a hefty 12.5% in 2014 to $36.7 billion, after just 1.8% growth in 2013 and an anemic 0.8% expansion in 2012. This revival will be helped in particular by steady improvements in the Euro-zone, the U.S.’s largest trading partner.

Overall, U.S. business travel spending is expected to advance 6.6% to $289.8 billion in 2014, while total person-trip volume is expected to increase 1.7% to 461 million trips for the year, according to the GBTA BTI™ Outlook – United States 2013 Q4, a report from the Global Business Travel Association (GBTA) sponsored by Visa, Inc.

“If our elected officials have finally gotten the message that political uncertainty and brinksmanship stifles economic growth, we should be looking at a very healthy year for U.S. business travel,” said Michael W. McCormick, GBTA executive director and COO. “Airports and hotels will be busy as American companies gain confidence and invest in travel to drive growth. And because business travel is a leading indicator of employment, this news is also another positive sign for the labor market.”

At the close of 2013, annual U.S. business travel spending is estimated by GBTA to have grown 3.8% to $272 billion, on a slight -0.3% decline in trip volume to 453.3 million person-trips. Notably, despite the Federal government shutdown in 2013, the private sector delivered a stronger third quarter than expected, which boosted business travel spending.

“With the close of 2013 bringing stronger than expected growth in the U.S. business travel market, 2014 is poised to see even more growth,” said Tad Fordyce, head of global commercial solutions at Visa Inc. “After two years of tepid growth in outbound international business travel, GBTA projects this segment will see double digit growth in 2014 as more U.S. businesses increase travel spending.”

Group Travel Accelerates in 2014

The meetings business has been on an upward swing for the past two years and this trend should continue in 2014. GBTA expects group travel spending to rise by 6.5% to $124.5 billion based on a volume increase of 1.7%.

“This is the healthiest growth outlook for meetings activity since 2011,” said McCormick. “Meetings are typically larger investments that require advance planning, and companies only make these decisions when they have confidence in the longer-term outlook for the economy.”

GBTA BTI™ – Highly Accurate Measure of Activity

The GBTA BTI™, a proprietary index of business travel activity, is estimated at 128 for Q4 2013 and 130 for Q1 2014. The BTI regained its pre-recession peak of 120 in the first quarter of 2012, but muddled through a sluggish 2012 and beginning of 2013. However, with economic momentum increasing, the BTI is now projected to reach 136 by the end of 2014.

“The BTI forecast has proven to be quite accurate over the past four years, and is getting even better as we gain more experience,” explained Joseph Bates, GBTA Foundation Vice President of Research. “We think of the BTI as a way to take the business travel industry’s temperature, and based on what we’re seeing, business travel should enjoy increasingly good health in the coming quarters.”

The GBTA BTI™ Outlook – United States report is available exclusively to GBTA members by clicking here and non-members may purchase the report through the GBTA Foundation by emailing [email protected].

About the GBTA BTI™ Outlook – United States

The GBTA BTI™ Outlook – United States projects aggregate business travel trends over the next eight quarters. The report includes key buy-side metrics such as total business travel volume and spending, plus supply-side projections of changes in costs, across both transient and meetings travel. Releases are published on the second Tuesday of each quarter.

The GBTA BTI™ Outlook uses an econometric model to better inform the forecast process. The model explicitly relates measures of business trip volume and spending, sourced from D.K. Shifflet & Associates to key economic and market drivers of business travel including: U.S. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and its components, U.S. Corporate Profits and Cash Flow, U.S. Employment & Unemployment, ISM Business Sentiment Index, Key Travel Components of CPI (airfare, lodging, food away from home, rental cars, fuel, transportation), among other components.

About the GBTA Foundation

The GBTA Foundation is the education and research foundation of the Global Business Travel Association (GBTA), the world’s premier business travel and corporate meetings organization. Collectively, GBTA’s 6,000-plus members manage over $340 billion of global business travel and meetings expenditures annually. GBTA provides its network of 21,000 business and government travel and meetings managers, as well as travel service providers, with networking events, news, education & professional development, research, and advocacy. The foundation was established in 1997 to support GBTA’s members and the industry as a whole. As the leading education and research foundation in the business travel industry, the GBTA Foundation seeks to fund initiatives to advance the business travel profession. The GBTA Foundation is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. For more information, see and .

Colleen Gallagher
+1 703 236 1133
GBTA