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PoB Hotels reveals 2026 Luxury Travel Trends Report

Entitled The Evolution of Luxury: From Glamour To Grounding, the report uncovers guests’ growing desire for depth and connection when they travel

UK

By Wendy Golledge

14 October 2025

pobhotels.com
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Luxury British independent hotelier, PoB Hotels, has released its 2026 Whitepaper, revealing traveller trends for the year ahead.

The third annual report from the collection of independent luxury hotels reveals heritage is one of the most important drivers of luxury travel, while comfort, connection and quiet have also become key.

Created in collaboration with luxury insight specialist Altiant, The Whitepaper surveys a diverse mix of 1,646 travellers to uncover evolving booking patterns and travel trends.

outdoor spa garden
The Nordic spa garden at Grantley Hall's Three Graces Spa

Heartfelt experiences and deep connections

“Affluent travellers are telling us, with striking clarity, that true luxury today is not about what can be displayed, but about how deeply an experience makes them feel,” says Kalindi Juneja, CEO at PoB Hotels.

“The findings confirm a profound rebalancing of priorities. Comfort and quiet are now viewed as status symbols, with guests craving space, stillness and wellbeing more than chandeliers or logos.”

Smiling woman in white suit jacket sat on a sofa

“The pace of change we are now witnessing is extraordinary. This year’s whitepaper shows us that the traditional markers of indulgence such as grandeur, spectacle and excess are being quietly replaced by values that feel more human: time, space, authenticity and emotional connection.”

Kalindi Juneja

CEO, PoB Hotels

Key finding from the 2026 Luxury Travel Trends Report

Three quarters of affluent travellers (75 per cent) say historic or cultural experiences are their top priority when booking.

“Beyond where people travel, it is how and why they travel that is shifting most dramatically,” says Juneja.

“Heritage has emerged as the most compelling driver of luxury travel, ahead even of food and wellness. This is because it offers a grounding in place and meaning in a world that feels increasingly fragmented.”

Nearly eight in 10 travellers (79 per cent) say comfort and quiet are ‘essential’ or ‘very important’ to their booking choices. Quiet, thoughtful gestures are becoming markers of refinement and drivers of loyalty.

“Today’s affluent travellers are no longer seduced by chandeliers or designer labels; instead, they are seeking experiences that feel personal, restorative and real,” says Juneja.

Man stood on a hill at night, with a starry moonlit background
“What matters most is the ability to find time to pause without pressure, offering true freedom from the demands of daily life.”

The rise of spontaneity and conscious detail

Spontaneity is the new luxury – while 47 per cent say they ‘usually’ book up to three months ahead, hotels report up to three-quarters of bookings now occur last-minute.

“Last-minute bookings are a new form of indulgence, the freedom to decide today and depart tomorrow,” says Juneja.

Despite economic uncertainty, travel remains a non-negotiable investment in wellbeing and relationships. Couple travel still dominates (79 per cent) but trips with friends are rising (28 per cent).

Multi-generational holidays are booming – with 19 per cent stating this as their reason to travel, up seven points year-on-year.

Chef cooking at a BBQ in the sunshine
Food is now the lens through which a stay is judged – provenance, seasonality and experiential dining are shaping the new luxury

Travellers are not seeking specifically eco-hotels but conscious choices resonate deeply. Local sourcing (69 per cent), minimal plastic (48 per cent) and visible support for communities (47 per cent) leave the biggest lasting impressions.

“This report is not just a reflection of current trends; it is an invitation to consider what the future of luxury could look like,” says Juneja.

“If the past defined luxury by accumulation, the present and indeed the future define it by discernment, depth and connection. The insights here challenge us all to think differently, to meet expectations that are higher and more nuanced than ever.”

The full report can be downloaded here.

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