Whether you’re a card carrying holder of crew Contiki or entering your Golden Gap era, July and August have traditionally held the crown as the undisputed peak of global travel. School holidays, European summers, and the collective rush to “get away” for a mid year break, all combined to create a predictable rhythm to the travel calendar.
Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!The latest travel trends of 2026, did not get the memo. Instead, the process of planning overseas adventures is now something far less linear. And infinitely more expensive if you get it wrong.
Across the industry, September has quietly overtaken the traditional peak season. What was once considered shoulder travel has become the new high season – one driven by a more affluent, often older traveller base who are deliberately avoiding peak summer heat in Europe. Add returning expats, river cruise schedules, and a tightly compressed inbound spike between late September and mid-October, and you get what insiders describe as a “perfect storm” of demand.
It’s a pressure point most travellers still don’t see coming. Until they’re trying to book it. The knock-on effect is already visible. Prices are rising, availability is tightening, and travellers who are even slightly flexible are starting to move one step earlier on the calendar.
But, before you resign yourself to a passport destined to collect dust, the month of May makes it presence known.
Once considered a pre-peak warm-up month, May has now become the strongest alternative window for premium European travel. Departures grew by more than 20% in 2025, climbing close to September and October volumes – despite having no school holiday pull factor. The appeal is simple: warm but not hot weather, fewer crowds, and – for now – significantly better value airfares.
What’s happening is not just seasonal drift. It’s a structural shift in how people are choosing to travel. The traditional travel calendar, with its neat peaks and predictable shoulder seasons, is flattening. Demand is spreading out, but not evenly. It spikes quickly once awareness spreads, and then behaves more like a bidding war than a calendar.
Nowhere is this more visible than in how people are booking.
The long-held advice that “booking X days in advance” guarantees the best fare is increasingly unreliable. Particularly in premium cabins. Averaged-out data across markets obscures how volatile pricing has become in reality. In business class, especially to Europe, sales are rare, unpredictable, and often non-recurring for long stretches of time.
The result is a growing mismatch between expectation and reality. Travellers wait for a deal that never arrives. Or, book too late into a market that has already repriced itself upwards.
At the same time, cruise and touring pipelines are pulling forward demand earlier than ever. Some itineraries are now being locked in 18 to 36 months in advance, creating artificial pressure on airfare availability long before most travellers even begin searching. Because flights can only be booked roughly 11 months out, demand builds in silence – then floods the market all at once.
Industry leaders are also increasingly blunt about what that means.
As Mark Trim, Managing Director of Flat Beds, explains, the current environment is less about selling a dream and more about solving a problem. “There’s strong demand for travel in the next six months, but limited supply at reasonable fare levels. Australians want Europe, but the airfare market is disrupted. People are increasingly open to stopovers or alternative airlines if it gets them better value. There is no one-size-fits-all solution anymore – timing, routing and strategy all matter.”
That complexity is reshaping the role of expertise in travel planning. Particularly as traditional airline dominance via major Asian hubs such as Singapore and Hong Kong has tightened, with premium cabins increasingly sold out or heavily inflated for the upcoming Northern summer season.
In response, more creative routing is emerging. Turkish Airlines has become a standout value option for Europe-bound travellers,. Ditto carriers such as Vietnam Airlines, Asiana, Korean Air and Oman Air. Even Japan-based connections, once considered a stable premium gateway, are now seeing rising pricing pressure.
But the biggest shift is not just availability – it’s how fares behave.
Dynamic pricing, powered by NDC systems, has moved airlines away from fixed fare buckets into continuous pricing models that adjust in real time based on demand signals, browsing behaviour and timing. In practice, this means the fare you see at 9:00am may not exist at 9:15am. Cached results on booking platforms can lag behind reality by hours or even days, creating growing mistrust among consumers.
That mistrust is also being fuelled by a quiet restructuring of what “business class” actually includes. Lounge access, seat selection, baggage allowance and refundability are no longer guaranteed. They now depend on fare tier, airline and route. In some cases, travellers are paying premium prices only to discover key inclusions are not part of their ticket.
In the worst cases, travellers arrive at the airport assuming full access, only to find lounge entry excluded entirely. The issue is not just cost – it’s clarity. And increasingly, it is being resolved only at the point of booking, where upsells are introduced after emotional commitment has already been made.
Flexibility is also being quietly redefined. Non-refundable business class fares are becoming more common at lower price tiers, with refunds now treated as a paid add-on rather than a standard expectation.
Layered onto this is an increasingly unstable global pricing environment. Industry observers note that any stabilisation in geopolitical tensions – particularly in the Middle East – could trigger a sudden correction in capacity and pricing, as airlines adjust for repositioned aircraft and delayed demand. If that occurs, the next four to six weeks may reveal sudden pockets of availability, particularly through less dominant carriers.
At the same time, loyalty is losing influence. Frequent flyer programs are no longer the dominant decision driver they once were, as reward seat devaluations and shifting status thresholds reduce their perceived value. Many travellers are now adopting multi-loyalty strategies, splitting spend across airlines rather than committing to one ecosystem.
On the cruise and touring side, demand is also evolving. According to Gen Thompson, General Manager of Flat Beds Tour + Cruise, smaller luxury yacht-style voyages under 200 passengers are seeing strong growth, as travellers move away from large-scale cruise ships in search of more intimate experiences. Expedition cruising – particularly Antarctica and the Arctic – is surging, driven by a “do it now” mindset and a desire for once-in-a-lifetime travel before conditions or costs change further.
Destinations such as Egypt, Portugal’s Douro Valley, and the Mekong River are also experiencing renewed demand, with many itineraries now selling out more than a year in advance. Solo travel continues to rise, with select cruise lines removing single supplements entirely. Multi-generational family travel is also becoming a defining trend among affluent travellers.
Taken together, the message from across the industry is consistent: travel is no longer a predictable cycle. It is a constantly shifting system shaped by pricing algorithms, early demand compression, and increasingly informed – and impatient – travellers.
Or, as one operator puts it more simply, the game still exists. The rules just aren’t visible anymore.