The travel industry is entering 2026 with a surge of renewed demand and a rapidly evolving set of traveller expectations. Across the UK, people are planning earlier, researching more deeply, and making decisions based on emotional context as much as practical needs. In this scenario, brands cannot rely on old patterns. They must understand what captures attention in the moments that matter.
Our Travel Insights Report for H1 2026 presents a clear view of how UK audiences behave across the open web during the first half of the year. This period is crucial because H1 is when most travellers begin thinking about where to go, how much to spend, and what experiences matter most.
The analysis outlines the motivations, seasonal dynamics, and neuro-contextual signals shaping travel behaviour, and these insights reveal what effective travel marketing must look like in 2026.
Keep reading to explore the most important travel trends for H1 2026, based solely on our report findings, and understand how advertisers, travel brands, tour operators, and travel businesses can transform these insights into stronger, more relevant travel advertising strategies.
Our report shows that travellers begin researching and planning long before peak holiday seasons. In early Q1, behaviours such as budget checking, inspiration gathering, and destination comparisons are already visible across the open web.
Travellers in H1 2026 are:
This behaviour highlights an important shift. Travellers begin shaping their decisions much earlier in H1, which means brands should plan for earlier campaign activation that aligns with the topics people are already exploring. By connecting creative and messaging to the seasonal moments, events, and motivations shaping early research, brands can build awareness sooner and guide consideration more effectively throughout H1.
Below, we highlight the five biggest travel trends emerging from our analysis. These insights uncover how travellers think and act, and where the best opportunities lie for data-driven travel marketing.
Travellers begin preparing for summer as early as January. They start building lists, comparing destinations, and checking budget-friendly options. In Q1, the data shows that saving money is the top motivation and represents 44.8% of analysed visits.
H1 is a season of preparation. Travellers are aspirational, but also cautious, looking for practical guidance that supports better decision-making.
Brands should activate awareness early in H1 and appear in the contexts where planning takes place. These moments include deal content, seasonal previews, weather insights, and early inspiration pieces. By showing up early, brands increase the likelihood of becoming part of the traveller's long-term consideration set.
Domestic travel plays a major role throughout H1. UK audiences are influenced by:
Campaigns should focus on short-form itineraries, cultural discovery, mobility ease, and food-led experiences. Local travel is rarely driven by price alone. It is shaped by what enhances time, enjoyment, and convenience.
Across outbound destinations, the report identifies four consistent drivers:
Messaging must shift as the season progresses. Q1 requires value-led creative that supports budgeting and planning. Q2 requires experience-led storytelling focusing on culture, exploration, and outdoor activities.
H1 is not a uniform season. The audience mindset evolves quickly, and brands should adapt in real time.
Our report also highlights several cultural pulses that shape attention in H1 2026:
Not all moments carry equal impact. For example, St Patrick’s Day generates a 56% engagement rate and significantly outperforms Valentine’s Day because it reflects a stronger cultural connection.
Travel brands should align advertising with emotionally relevant cultural events. Contextually placed creative around these moments can strengthen brand association, improve attention, and help guide traveller decisions during H1.
Throughout H1, travellers consistently search for practical help such as:
Ads should provide clarity, value, and relevance. Creatives that support decision making outperform ads that interrupt or distract. This includes interactive formats, explorable visuals, and value-led storytelling that helps travellers make confident choices.
Liz, our proprietary neuro-contextual AI, plays a central role in helping brands connect with travellers throughout H1. Built to mirror the nuance of human thought, she interprets deeper signals of interest, emotion, and intent in real time. This allows brands to understand not only what people are reading, but why they are engaging with that content at that particular moment.
These capabilities ensure that travel campaigns reach audiences when they are most receptive and support them as they move from early inspiration to active research and, ultimately, booking. Liz brings together human-like understanding and real-time neuro-contextual insight, giving brands a measurable advantage throughout the H1 travel journey.
H1 2026 is a period defined by early planning, cultural influence, and shifting motivations. Brands that succeed will be those that: show up early, understand seasonal behaviour changes, align with emotional and cultural moments, use data-driven insights to shape communication, and activate creative that provides genuine value.
To explore all insights in depth, download the full H1 2026 Travel Insights Report and plan smarter for the year ahead.