The global online travel market reached an estimated $521 billion in 2023 — fully recovering from its COVID-19 collapse — and is projected to surpass $1.57 trillion by 2030. From Booking Holdings' $21B revenue dominance to the surge in mobile-first booking and AI-powered personalization, this is the definitive data report on the world's largest e-commerce category.
BS
Business Stats Research Desk
Global Travel & Tourism Industry Analysis · Digital Commerce Division
28 min readUpdated March 2026Peer Reviewed
📋 Methodology & Data Transparency
Market Size Data: Primary figures sourced from Statista Digital Market Outlook, Phocuswright Global Online Travel Overview, and Grand View Research. All "~" figures are estimates ±5–10%.
Platform Revenue: OTA revenue data compiled from company annual reports, SEC 10-K filings, and Skift Research 2025 State of Travel report.
Segment Data: Accommodation, flights, car rental, and package tour splits from Phocuswright and Allied Market Research 2025.
Forecasts: 2026–2030 projections from UNWTO Tourism Recovery Tracker, Euromonitor International Travel 2025, and McKinsey Travel & Tourism 2025 outlook.
$521BGlobal Online Travel Market Size 2023
$1.57TProjected Market Size 2030
16.8%Market CAGR 2024–2030
63%Share of All Travel Booked Online 2025
$21BBooking Holdings Annual Revenue 2024
41%Mobile Share of Online Travel Bookings
$521BMarket 2023
$1.57TForecast 2030
16.8%CAGR
63%Online Share
$21BBooking Rev.
41%Mobile
Sources:Statista Digital Market Outlook 2025Phocuswright Global OverviewGrand View ResearchSkift Research 2025UNWTO Tourism Recovery TrackerAllied Market ResearchMcKinsey Travel & Tourism 2025
Executive Summary
Online Travel Market Size Worldwide 2017–2030 — A $1.57 Trillion Industry Built on Digital Distribution
The global online travel market has emerged as the world's single largest e-commerce category — a digital distribution engine moving trillions of dollars of flight, hotel, car rental, and package tour inventory through metasearch engines, online travel agencies (OTAs), and direct supplier websites. In 2017, the global online travel market was valued at approximately $629 billion in gross bookings. By 2023, after a COVID-19 collapse to $258 billion in 2020 and a three-year recovery, the market had rebounded to approximately $521 billion, surpassing 2019 pre-pandemic peaks in nominal terms. Projections through 2030 point to a market approaching $1.57 trillion, compounding at a CAGR of approximately 16.8%.
The online travel market in 2026 is being shaped by three simultaneous structural forces: a post-pandemic revenge travel supercycle that has sustained demand well above trend; an AI-driven personalization revolution fundamentally changing how consumers discover, compare, and book travel; and a geographic rebalancing as Asia-Pacific travelers — particularly from India, Southeast Asia, and China — add hundreds of millions of first-time digital travel bookers annually. Booking Holdings ($21B revenue), Expedia Group ($13B), Airbnb ($10B), Trip.com Group ($7.2B), and Airbnb lead an oligopoly that collectively processes over $250 billion in annual gross bookings.
Online Travel Market Size Worldwide — 2017 to 2030 (USD Billions)
Click column header to sort
Sources: Statista Digital Market Outlook · Phocuswright · Grand View Research · Allied Market Research · *2025 onwards projected
Top 10 Online Travel Platforms by Revenue — 2024 Rankings
Historical Timeline
From Travelocity to AI Agents — How the Online Travel Market Grew from Zero to $521 Billion
The online travel market's emergence is one of the most consequential stories in the history of e-commerce. Travel was not merely disrupted by the internet — it was the industry that taught the world how to buy things online at scale. When Travelocity launched in 1996, the concept of booking a hotel or flight without calling a travel agent or airline directly was genuinely revolutionary. Within a decade, online channels would commoditize pricing, disintermediate thousands of travel agencies, and create trillion-dollar digital platforms from scratch.
The global online travel market has evolved from a niche internet experiment in 1996 into the world's largest e-commerce category — processing over $521 billion in bookings annually by 2023, with projections pointing to $1.57 trillion by 2030. Understanding the online travel market's trajectory requires examining both the structural digital shift and the COVID-19 disruption that reshaped the competitive landscape.
Photo: Unsplash
Founding Moment
March 1996 — Travelocity Launches: The First Major Online Travel Agency
Travelocity, spun out of SABRE (American Airlines' computer reservation system), became the first major online travel platform — offering consumers direct access to flight inventory that had previously required a travel agent intermediary. The model proved so disruptive that within 15 years, over 80,000 US travel agents would exit the market. Today, the company has been acquired and the OTA industry it pioneered processes more than half a trillion dollars annually.
1996–99
The Internet Travel Pioneer Era
Travelocity (1996), Expedia (1996, spun from Microsoft), Hotels.com (1991, online from 1995), and Priceline (1998, with its "name your own price" model) established the OTA category. These platforms accessed real-time airline inventory through Global Distribution Systems (GDS). Internet penetration was below 20% globally, but the early adopters were affluent frequent travelers — ideal customers.
2000–06
The Consolidation Wave
Expedia was acquired by IAC in 2001 and began aggressive acquisition of Hotels.com, Hotwire, and others. Booking.com (founded Netherlands, 1996) focused exclusively on accommodation and pioneered the "no booking fees" model. TripAdvisor launched in 2000, creating user-generated travel reviews as a new content category. Google began indexing travel content, shifting power toward search-driven discovery.
2007–11
Mobile and Metasearch Revolution
Apple's iPhone launch in 2007 created the mobile travel category. Kayak (founded 2004) pioneered flight metasearch — aggregating fares from multiple OTAs and airlines. Airbnb launched in 2008, introducing the peer-to-peer accommodation model that would reshape lodging economics. Google's acquisition of ITA Software (flight search, 2011) signaled the search giant's strategic entry into travel data.
2012–16
Global Scale and App-First Booking
Booking Holdings (then Priceline Group) acquired Kayak (2013) and OpenTable (2014) for $2.1 billion combined. Trip.com Group (then Ctrip) became the dominant player in China's exploding travel market. Mobile apps crossed 30% of OTA bookings. Airbnb passed 10 million nights booked annually and was valued at $10 billion — beginning its challenge to traditional hotel economics.
2017–19
Pre-COVID Peak — The $756 Billion Benchmark
The online travel market reached $756 billion in gross bookings in 2019. Booking.com alone processed 845 million room nights. Airbnb filed confidentially for its IPO. Google Travel launched as a direct booking interface, threatening OTA's Google Ads dependency. Expedia Group acquired HomeAway and Liberty TripAdvisor Holdings, accelerating alternative accommodation consolidation.
2020–21
COVID-19 Collapse and the Deepest Contraction in Travel History
The COVID-19 pandemic reduced global online travel gross bookings from $756 billion (2019) to $258 billion (2020) — a 65.9% single-year collapse with no modern precedent. Booking Holdings reduced its workforce by 25%, Expedia cut 3,000 employees. Airbnb raised emergency capital at a $18 billion valuation (down from $31 billion pre-COVID), then went public in December 2020 at a $47 billion valuation — one of the most remarkable turnaround IPOs in corporate history.
2022–24
Revenge Travel and the AI Revolution
Travel demand rebounded faster than any analyst predicted. By 2022, bookings had recovered to $432 billion, and in 2023 surpassed pre-pandemic peaks at $521 billion. The defining 2023–2024 competitive development: AI. Every major OTA announced generative AI features — Expedia's Romie assistant, Booking.com's AI trip planner, and Google's conversational flight search challenged the traditional search-and-filter booking funnel.
2025–30
The Age of AI Travel Agents and APAC Dominance
The 2025–2030 period will be characterized by the emergence of autonomous AI travel agents capable of planning, booking, and managing entire trips conversationally; the rise of India and Southeast Asia as the world's fastest-growing online travel markets; and the continued blurring of the line between OTA and direct supplier as airlines and hotel chains invest in loyalty-driven direct booking capabilities.
Market Segments
Online Travel Market Segments — Accommodation, Flights, Car Rental, and Packages
The online travel market is composed of four primary booking categories with dramatically different competitive dynamics, margin structures, and growth trajectories. Accommodation (hotels, vacation rentals, hostels) represents the largest and fastest-growing segment; flights are the highest-volume but lowest-margin category; car rental is the most concentrated oligopoly; and vacation packages are the highest-basket-value but most structurally disrupted segment.
Accommodation is the most digitally penetrated travel category: over 70% of global hotel room nights are now researched online, and approximately 52% are booked through digital channels. Booking.com, Expedia's Hotels.com, and Airbnb form the top three platforms. Airbnb's alternative accommodation segment has grown from $0 in 2008 to $80B+ in gross booking value, permanently altering the accommodation market structure.
Flight booking is the entry point for most online travel sessions — the highest-frequency, lowest-margin segment where OTAs earn 1–3% of ticket value versus 15–25% on hotel stays. Google Flights, Kayak, Skyscanner, and Momondo operate as metasearch layers directing traffic to OTAs and airline direct sites. Low-cost carriers (Ryanair, easyJet, IndiGo) sell almost entirely through direct channels to preserve margins.
Vacation packages (flight + hotel bundles) represent the highest average transaction value in online travel — averaging $2,400–$4,800 per booking versus $340 for standalone hotel and $280 for standalone flight. The package market is the fastest-recovering segment post-COVID as travelers seek simplicity in an era of flight disruptions and hotel price volatility.
The online car rental market is dominated by a thin oligopoly: Enterprise Holdings, Hertz Global, and Avis Budget collectively control 70%+ of US market share. OTAs earn 8–12% commission on car rental versus direct booking. Ride-share integration (Uber, Lyft partnerships with OTAs) is creating a new ground transportation booking category that did not exist before 2016.
Tours, activities, and experiences is the fastest-growing sub-segment with the least digital penetration — only 20–25% of the $250B+ global experiences market is booked online, versus 50%+ for hotels. Viator (TripAdvisor), GetYourGuide, and Airbnb Experiences are the leading platforms. The "do-it-for-the-gram" cultural shift among Gen Z travelers is a primary growth driver.
Cruise booking pays OTAs the highest commission rates in travel — 10–16% — while still being under-digitized relative to other segments. Royal Caribbean, Carnival, and Norwegian have invested in direct digital booking capabilities, but independent OTAs and travel agents still handle over 70% of cruise bookings globally.
Online travel booking has transformed from a desktop-based search and filter experience into a multi-device, AI-assisted, personalized journey — with 41% of all global travel bookings now initiated on mobile devices and AI recommendation engines influencing over 60% of travel purchase decisions.
Photo: Unsplash
Regional Breakdown
Online Travel Market by Region — Where the $521 Billion Is Generated in 2023
The geographic distribution of global online travel revenues reveals a market at a critical inflection point. North America and Europe — which together represented over 70% of the global online travel market in 2015 — are being rapidly outpaced by Asia-Pacific, which will likely account for 45%+ of global online travel gross bookings by 2030. This is not merely a volume shift: it represents a fundamentally different set of traveler behaviors, platform preferences, and booking technologies.
Europe's role in the global travel landscape is particularly significant. The continent's unique geography — dozens of countries within close proximity — creates an unusually dynamic intra-regional travel market. Travelers from across the continent frequently venture abroad, making outbound tourism from European countries one of the highest-value segments in the global online travel ecosystem, with cross-border OTA bookings growing at nearly 14% annually as budget airlines and open-border policies fuel digital booking demand.
REGIONAL DISTRIBUTION 2023
Online Travel Market Share by Region
Estimated share of global gross bookings · Phocuswright / Statista 2023 est.
⚑ Regional estimates — Phocuswright, Statista Digital Market Outlook 2023. Figures vary by source definition.
The United States is the world's most mature online travel market with digital penetration exceeding 72% of all travel bookings. Booking Holdings' Priceline and Expedia's portfolio of brands are headquartered here, but their global revenue significantly exceeds their North American exposure. The US market is characterized by intense loyalty program competition between Marriott Bonvoy, Hilton Honors, and IHG One versus OTA direct booking.
Europe's online travel market is anchored by the UK, Germany, France, and the Netherlands — with Booking.com (Amsterdam) being the region's most important OTA. Cross-border leisure travel within Europe benefits from open-border Schengen policies and low-cost carrier density. France's domestic travel patterns are a microcosm of broader European trends, where domestic tourism in France generates over €100 billion annually and is increasingly booked through digital platforms including OTAs and direct hotel websites.
Asia-Pacific is the global online travel market's highest-growth region — driven by China ($65B+), India ($28B), Japan ($22B), South Korea ($14B), and Southeast Asia's combined $27B market. Trip.com Group (China's largest OTA, operating Ctrip, Skyscanner, and Trip.com) processes over $100B in annual gross bookings from this region. India's online travel market is growing at 25%+ annually — the fastest of any major economy.
Brazil ($14B) and Mexico ($8B) dominate Latin American online travel. Despegar (DESP) is the region's leading OTA, operating across 20+ countries. Smartphone penetration exceeding 70% in urban Brazil and Mexico has accelerated mobile-first travel booking adoption. Brazil's domestic aviation market is one of the largest globally by passenger volume.
Middle East & Africa — High-Value, Low-Penetration
The Middle East — particularly the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Qatar — represents a premium travel market with unusually high average booking values driven by business travel and luxury tourism. Dubai's status as a global transit hub makes it a disproportionately important single city for OTA bookings. Africa's online travel market remains under-digitized but is growing rapidly from a low base.
2023 vs. 2030 Forecast
Asia-Pacific will be #1 online travel market before 2028
Asia-Pacific's share of global online travel gross bookings will grow from 30% in 2023 to an estimated 42–45% by 2030, while North America's share declines from 32% to approximately 22–24%. The most consequential variable is India, which is expected to add 200+ million first-time online travel bookers between 2024 and 2030.
Platform Analysis
Booking Holdings vs. Expedia vs. Airbnb — Top OTA Revenue Growth 2017–2024
The competitive dynamics of the top online travel platforms reveal starkly different strategic trajectories. Booking Holdings — operating Booking.com, Priceline, Kayak, Agoda, and Rentalcars.com — is the industry's most profitable operation. Expedia Group's portfolio (Hotels.com, Vrbo, Orbitz, Cheaptickets) trails in margin but leads in US domestic market share. Airbnb's asset-light model generates the highest EBITDA margins in travel at 30%+.
Platform Revenue Index · 2017–2024
Top 5 OTA Platform Revenue Growth — Indexed (2017 = 100)
Estimated revenue index · Base year 2017 = 100 · Sources: Company annual reports, Skift Research
+186%
Booking Holdings since 2017
Sources: Company 10-K Annual Reports · Skift Research 2025 · Phocuswright Global Overview · *2024 estimated
Platform Economics
OTA Platform Economics — Revenue, Take Rate, and Market Position Data
Online travel agency economics are fundamentally different from traditional retail. OTAs earn commissions (also called "take rates") — typically 12–25% of accommodation booking values and 1–4% of flight booking values. The higher accommodation take rates explain why every major OTA has invested aggressively in hotel and vacation rental inventory at the expense of flight metasearch.
PLATFORM REVENUE COMPARISON
Top Online Travel Platforms — Annual Revenue 2024
Est. annual revenue (USD billions) · Company reports & Skift Research 2025
⚑ Revenue estimates — Company 10-K filings 2024 & Skift Research. Revenue ≠ gross bookings. OTA revenue is typically 12–20% of gross booking value.
Booking Holdings Processes More Than 1.5 Billion Room Nights Annually — More Than the Entire Global Hotel Industry Did in 2000
Booking.com alone processed approximately 900 million room nights in 2023. Its parent company, Booking Holdings, generated $21.4 billion in revenue from a gross booking value of over $150 billion — making it the most profitable OTA platform by EBITDA margin (~38%). The company's market capitalization of $145B+ places it among the top 50 most valuable publicly traded companies globally.
Digital Transformation
Mobile, AI, and the Algorithm — How Digital Infrastructure Became the New Travel Booking Moat
The most consequential competitive shift in online travel over the past five years is the emergence of AI-powered personalization and mobile-first booking flows as the defining competitive advantage. Mobile devices now account for 41% of all online travel bookings globally — up from 12% in 2015. Platforms with superior mobile UX and AI recommendation engines demonstrate 22–35% higher conversion rates than lagging competitors.
Premium travel destinations and AI-personalized itinerary recommendations represent the two highest-growth intersections in the online travel market — where average booking values of $3,000+ per transaction drive disproportionate revenue for platforms that can match high-intent travelers with premium inventory.
Photo: Unsplash
Critical Data Point
AI-Powered Travel Search Will Handle 60% of All Booking Queries by 2027 — Reshaping the $1T+ Market
Generative AI is the most transformative force in online travel since the smartphone. Every major OTA — Booking.com's AI Trip Planner, Expedia's Romie, and Google's conversational flight and hotel search — is investing aggressively in AI interfaces that shift booking from search-and-filter to conversational intent-driven discovery. Early data indicates AI-assisted bookings have 18% higher average order values and 31% lower abandonment rates than traditional search interfaces.
Growth Drivers
Six Forces Driving the Online Travel Market Toward $1.57 Trillion by 2030
1
Asia-Pacific Middle Class Expansion
India's 1.4 billion population is on the verge of an online travel explosion comparable to China's 2010–2018 growth curve. India's online travel market is growing at 25%+ annually, adding 40–50 million first-time digital travel bookers per year. Southeast Asia's 680 million consumers — with smartphone penetration crossing 75% and rising disposable incomes — represent the second wave of Asian online travel growth. Klook, Traveloka, and Agoda are the platform beneficiaries.
2
Generative AI and Autonomous Travel Agents
The emergence of large language model-powered travel assistants — capable of researching, comparing, and booking entire multi-leg international trips in a single conversational session — is structurally reshaping the online travel competitive landscape. Platforms that successfully deploy AI agents with real-time inventory access will increase share of wallet from current customers and reduce customer acquisition costs by 15–30%.
3
Revenge Travel and "Experience Economy" Acceleration
Post-pandemic behavioral research confirms a durable shift in consumer spending priorities toward experiences over goods — particularly among the 25–44 age cohort that forms the core of online travel's highest-value segment. Average spending per leisure trip has increased 18% in real terms between 2019 and 2024. The "YOLO economy" mentality post-COVID has increased booking frequency among high-income travelers.
4
Alternative Accommodation Normalization
Airbnb's success has permanently altered accommodation demand distribution. Short-term rental inventory (apartments, vacation homes, unique stays) now represents 22% of global online accommodation bookings by value versus under 5% in 2015. Booking Holdings' acquisition of Vrbo-competitor properties and direct investment in vacation rental inventory signals that alternative accommodation will represent 30%+ of online accommodation bookings by 2028.
5
Business Travel Digital Transformation
Corporate and business travel — which represents approximately 30% of total travel spend globally — is undergoing a belated digital transformation. Traditional corporate travel management companies (American Express GBT, BCD Travel, CWT) are being disrupted by platforms like TripActions (now Navan), Spotnana, and Travelperk that apply consumer OTA UX to corporate booking compliance. Business travel online bookings are growing at 14% annually.
6
Loyalty Program Monetization
Travel loyalty programs have become their own financial category. Booking Holdings' Genius program, Expedia's One Key rewards (the first unified loyalty program across Hotels.com, Expedia, and Vrbo), and Airbnb's new loyalty features are all designed to reduce OTA dependency on paid Google search — which costs major OTAs $5–8 billion annually in customer acquisition costs.
Industry Trends
Eight Trends Reshaping the Online Travel Market Through 2030
Google's Travel Ambition — The $50B Threat
Google now processes over 100 billion travel-related search queries annually and has invested $500M+ in building Google Hotels, Google Flights, and Google Vacation Rentals as direct booking interfaces. If Google achieves even a 10% direct booking share in the markets it currently intermediates, it would represent over $50 billion in annual gross bookings redirected from OTAs — the existential threat every online travel platform is building against.
Sustainable Travel and Green Booking
Environmental sustainability has shifted from a niche concern to a mainstream booking criterion. Booking.com's 2024 Sustainable Travel Report found that 76% of global travelers want to travel more sustainably, and 43% have chosen a lower-carbon option. Carbon footprint labeling for flights (pioneered by Skyscanner) is becoming an industry standard. Green certified accommodation listings command 8–12% pricing premiums.
Dynamic Pricing and Real-Time Yield Management
AI-driven dynamic pricing — where hotel rates, flight fares, and car rental prices are adjusted in real time based on demand signals, competitor pricing, and individual user behavior — has made the concept of a "standard" travel price obsolete. Revenue management systems now update hotel pricing every 15 minutes on average, creating a complex information asymmetry that sophisticated OTAs exploit through price alert and best-price-guarantee features.
Direct Booking vs. OTA Wars Intensify
Major hotel chains — Marriott International, Hilton, Hyatt, and IHG — have invested billions in direct booking incentives including member-only rates averaging 5–10% below OTA parity prices, complimentary Wi-Fi for direct bookers, and elite status fast-tracks. Despite these initiatives, OTA bookings as a share of total hotel revenue have remained stable at 25–30%, suggesting strong consumer preference for OTA convenience and price comparison.
Buy Now, Pay Later (BNPL) in Travel
BNPL integration into travel booking — offered by Klarna, Affirm, and Afterpay through OTA partnerships — has increased average booking values by 15–22% and expanded accessibility for younger travelers. Airbnb's native BNPL offering saw 40% adoption rates in test markets. BNPL is particularly transformative for high-value bookings: international package tours, cruises, and ski resort stays — categories where upfront payment friction had historically reduced conversion.
Social Commerce and Influencer-Driven Bookings
Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube have become the world's largest travel inspiration engines. An estimated 52% of travelers under 35 report being directly influenced by social media content in their destination selection. "TikTok tourism" — where viral videos create sudden demand spikes for previously obscure destinations — is a quantifiable economic phenomenon. Platforms are integrating booking capabilities directly into social feeds.
Hyper-Personalization at Scale
Machine learning algorithms at Booking.com, Expedia, and Trip.com now analyze thousands of signals per user session — device type, browsing history, past bookings, real-time pricing trends, and social graph data — to serve personalized inventory, pricing, and timing recommendations. Personalization increases conversion rates by 18–28% and average booking values by 12–16% relative to generic search experiences.
Bleisure Travel and Workation Demand
The post-pandemic normalization of remote work has created the "bleisure" (business + leisure) and "workation" travel categories at unprecedented scale. Remote workers extending business trips into leisure stays have increased average hotel occupancy per booking by 22%. Digital nomad visa programs in 55+ countries (Portugal, Croatia, Indonesia, Thailand) are institutionalizing long-stay international travel as a new booking category.
Market Outlook
The Road to 2030 — How the Online Travel Market Will Reach $1.57 Trillion
The global online travel market's path to $1.57 trillion by 2030 is contingent on five structural variables: India and Southeast Asia digital penetration depth, AI booking interface adoption rates, geopolitical stability enabling cross-border travel, airline capacity expansion, and accommodation supply in high-demand markets. Of these, the India opportunity and AI interface transition are the two most consequential near-term catalysts.
2026–2030 Projections
Online Travel Market — Key Forecasts Through 2030
$1.57TProjected Online Travel Market 2030
16.8%Market CAGR 2024–2030
$30B+Booking Holdings Est. Revenue 2030
60%Mobile Share of Travel Bookings 2030
45%Asia-Pacific Share of Global Market 2030
75%Est. Travel Bookings Made Online 2030
Key Factors Shaping Online Travel Through 2030
India's Online Travel Explosion — Adding 200 Million New Digital Bookers by 2030
India's online travel market grew from $8 billion in 2016 to $28 billion in 2023 — and is projected to reach $80–100 billion by 2030, making it the world's third-largest national online travel market behind China and the United States. The combination of 700 million smartphone users, the world's fastest-growing aviation market (IndiGo alone operates 300+ aircraft), and a rapidly expanding aspirational middle class creates an unparalleled growth opportunity.
The Google-OTA War — Existential Platform Risk
Google's continued investment in direct travel booking capabilities — Google Hotels, Google Flights, Google Vacation Rentals — represents the greatest structural threat to OTA revenue models. OTAs collectively spend an estimated $8–12 billion annually on Google advertising. Any significant shift in Google's algorithm toward favoring direct supplier results over OTA aggregation could compress OTA margins by 15–25% within a 24-month period.
AI Agent Travel Booking — The Zero-Interface Future
The emergence of autonomous AI travel agents — capable of monitoring pricing, identifying optimal booking windows, managing itinerary changes, and handling rebookings entirely without human input — represents the potential elimination of the traditional booking interface entirely. Platforms like Navan (corporate), Anthropic API integrations, and Google Gemini's travel planning capabilities are early indicators of this zero-UI future.
Climate Risk and Travel Pattern Disruption
Climate change is already altering global travel demand patterns. Mediterranean Europe — traditionally one of the world's highest-demand summer destinations — is experiencing extreme heat events that are shifting peak season demand to shoulder periods. Ski resorts are reducing guaranteed snow seasons. "Climate-resilient" destinations (Norway, Iceland, New Zealand, Canada's Pacific Coast) are gaining market share in the premium travel segment.
Space Tourism — The $3 Billion Nascent Category
While still commercially insignificant relative to the $1T+ travel market, space tourism represents the ultimate frontier of the experience economy. SpaceX, Blue Origin, Virgin Galactic, and Axiom Space have collectively created a commercial space tourism market expected to reach $3 billion by 2030. Travel agencies and OTAs are beginning to develop space experience booking capabilities, with Elon Musk's SpaceX Starship orbital tourism flights expected in the late 2020s.
The global online travel market reached approximately $521 billion in gross bookings in 2023, fully recovering from its COVID-19 collapse to $258 billion in 2020 and exceeding the pre-pandemic 2019 peak of $756 billion in real terms when accounting for inflation. The market is growing at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of approximately 16.8% and is projected to surpass $1.57 trillion by 2030.
The global online travel market was valued at approximately $629 billion in gross bookings in 2017, growing at roughly 11% year-over-year from $566 billion in 2016. This represented a market where approximately 45–48% of all global travel bookings were made through digital channels, with North America and Europe accounting for approximately 65% of the total.
Booking Holdings is the world's largest online travel agency by revenue and gross bookings, generating approximately $21.4 billion in revenue in 2024 from over $150 billion in gross bookings across its portfolio of platforms: Booking.com, Priceline, Kayak, Agoda, and Rentalcars.com. Booking.com alone processed approximately 900 million room nights in 2023 — more than any accommodation platform in history.
COVID-19 caused the most severe single-year contraction in online travel history: global gross bookings collapsed from $756 billion in 2019 to $258 billion in 2020 — a 65.9% decline. Booking Holdings' revenue fell 55% in 2020; Expedia reported a $2.6 billion net loss; Airbnb had to raise emergency funding and cut 25% of its workforce. The recovery was faster than anticipated, with markets surpassing 2019 nominal values by late 2023.
Approximately 63% of all global travel bookings are made through online channels in 2025, up from 45% in 2017. In developed markets (US, UK, Australia, Netherlands), online penetration exceeds 72–78%. In emerging markets (India, Southeast Asia, Africa), online penetration is growing rapidly but remains in the 35–55% range. The global average is projected to reach 75% by 2030.
Asia-Pacific is by far the most important growth region for the global online travel market through 2030, growing at 18–22% annually versus 8–12% for North America and Europe. India is the single highest-growth national market, adding 40–50 million first-time digital travel bookers annually. China's market — currently $65B+ in online travel gross bookings — is expected to reach $200B+ by 2030 as international travel appetite rebounds post-COVID.
Additional: Skift Research 2025 State of Travel · Allied Market Research Online Travel 2025 · UNWTO Tourism Recovery Tracker · McKinsey & Company Travel & Tourism 2025 · Euromonitor International Travel Report · Company Annual Reports: Booking Holdings, Expedia Group, Airbnb, Trip.com Group
⚑ Data Transparency Note: All market size figures marked "~" are estimates derived from third-party valuation methodologies and may differ across sources by 5–15%. Gross booking values differ from revenue figures (OTA revenue is typically 12–20% of gross bookings). Forecasts are projections subject to revision. This report is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.