By Janelle Visser

Experiences are no longer riding in the back seat of the travel economy: They are driving the bus. At $271 billion in 2025 and projected to reach $342 billion by 2029, tours, activities and attractions are now seeing growth that outpaces every other major segment of the travel industry, according to The Outlook for Travel Experiences 2019–2029, a comprehensive global market-sizing report for the experiences sector released by Arival and Phocuswright. The research confirms what many in the industry have long suspected — something big is happening in experiences.

Built from extensive operator data, global traveler research, third-party economic indicators and a detailed supply-side model, this report gives the experiences industry the clearest picture of its scale. And meeting and event planners should take note.

Experiences Have Moved to the Center of the Travel Decision

For years, tours, activities and attractions were treated as a nice-to-have — something travelers figured out once they arrived at their destination. No longer. The latest research confirms a structural shift: Experiences are now a primary driver of destination choice, rather than an afterthought.

Travelers are prioritizing experiences like never before, fueled by a generational preference for “experiences over things,” and a rapid shift toward planning and booking in advance.

The sector has not only recovered since the pandemic era — at a projected growth of 8% compound annual growth rate from 2023-2029 vs. 5% in the wider travel sector, it is now one of the fastest growing parts of travel, reshaping how people choose where to go and what to
do. Tour, activity and attraction products are no longer peripheral to the travel decision —
they’re central to it. That has real implications for how planners position their meetings and
events.

One of the most striking findings in the report is the pace of digital acceleration in the sector — and the gap that still remains. Online channels have grown from just 17% of bookings in 2019 to a projected 42% by 2029, with online travel agencies emerging as the fastest-growing channel, expected to see more than fivefold growth in gross bookings over that same period.

But here’s the thing: Even with all that growth, the experiences sector is still significantly under-digitized. In 2025, only 33% of gross bookings in experiences took place through online channels — compared to 64% for the broader global travel industry.

That gap isn’t a weakness; it’s an opportunity. As more operators adopt modern booking
systems, and as artificial intelligence (AI) begins to reshape how travelers discover and book
experiences, the online booking market is poised to expand dramatically.

The experiences sector is at an inflection point. Investor interest is surging, with major players like Klook, GetYourGuide and MyRealTrip eyeing public markets, and global platforms like Airbnb, Booking.com and Expedia aggressively expanding their experiences offerings. The momentum is real — and so are the challenges, from fragmentation and uneven tech adoption to AI-driven changes and intensified competition in the experiences marketplace.

The Outlook for Travel Experiences 2019–2029 digs into all of it: the growth projections, the channel shifts, the competitive dynamics and what it all means. If you want the complete picture, download the full report today at arival.travel/research/the-outlook-for-travel-experiences-2019-2029.

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