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Global Business Travel Professionals Signal Stronger Confidence But Also Constraint Heading Into 2026, According to Latest GBTA Poll

New industry poll points to stable-to-rising travel spending and volume, with affordability, traveler safety and cross-border concerns poised to shape the year ahead

Global business travel professionals are cautiously optimistic as the industry enters the year ahead ─ despite concerns over balancing travel budgets with costs, traveler safety and satisfaction, and potentially stricter U.S. border and visa requirements.

Organizations expect their corporate travel budgets to hold or rise and anticipate modest increases in trip volumes and revenue. Balancing cost control with traveler satisfaction will remain a central challenge, along with managing traveler safety related to travel-disruptive situations. Potentially, new cross‑border requirements pose a risk to international mobility and employee willingness to travel.

This is according to the última encuesta from the Global Business Travel Association (GBTA) of 571 corporate travel buyers, travel suppliers, and travel management company (TMC) professionals across 40 countries surveying their outlook and concerns for business travel in the year ahead.

“The results show an industry propelled by anticipated stronger demand and financial indicators, yet potentially constrained by external factors that could reshape business travel in the year ahead,” said Suzanne Neufang, CEO, GBTA. “Traveling for work is critical to how global companies and economies grow, innovate and connect. We need to ensure it remains accessible, safe, and seamless ─ and that every trip counts.”

Key highlights from the GBTA January 2026 poll:

Overall Cautious Optimism for the Year Ahead

  • Six in ten (59%) industry professionals polled—and consistent among buyers, suppliers, TMCs and regions—say they are optimistic about the industry this year. Globally, about a third (31%) of respondents, on average, cite a neutral outlook.
  • While the majority are optimistic, trade, cross-border and economic headwinds have left their mark on travel buyers—their outlook for 2026 is down 12 percentage points versus coming into 2025 (based on GBTA’s Encuesta de noviembre de 2024).

Stability or Slight Increases Expected for Business Travel Spending

  • A vast majority of buyers (84%) expect their organization’s business travel spending in 2026 to increase (44%) or stay at 2025 levels (40%). Among buyers who expect a rise, the average expected increase is 12%. Only 13% of buyers expect a decrease.

Travel Volume at a Steady Cadence

  • One-third of travel buyers (35%) expect the number of business trips taken at their company to increase in 2026, while almost half (47%) expect levels to remain the same as 2025.
  • Among those buyers anticipating travel volumes to increase, the average expected increase is 14%. Buyers in EMEA (25%) are more likely to expect a decrease year over year.

Corporate Buyers Expect More Employee Travelers

  • Compared to 2025, 42% of travel managers expect the number of employee travelers at their organization to increase in some capacity in 2026—with one-third (33%) of those expecting an increase of less than 10%.
  • Additionally, 38% expect their organization’s number of business travelers to stay about the same as 2025, while one in five (18%) expect a decline.

Travel Suppliers and TMCs Anticipate an Upside to Revenue

  • ​​​​​​​Almost half (47%) of TMCs and suppliers expect to see increases in revenue in 2026, anticipating an average expected increase of 15%.
  • Two in five TMCs and suppliers (39%) expect revenue to remain the same as 2025, while only 14% on average expect a decrease.
  • Additionally, two in five TMCs and suppliers (39%) expect revenue to remain the same as 2025.
  • North America suppliers (38%) were least likely among regions to expect an increase in 2026, with 46% expecting revenue to remain at 2025 levels.

Business Travel Operating Budgets Remain Steady to Growing, With Some Concerns

  • Three-quarters (75%) of travel buyers expect their overall 2026 budget for travel management operations to increase (30%) or stay consistent with 2025 (45%). Among those expecting an increase, 20% anticipate less than 10% growth. However, 18% expect their 2026 operational budget to decrease.
  • Program cost savings and control is a bigger concern for U.S. travel buyers (74%) compared to other regions (62% non-U.S.).
  • When travel suppliers and TMCs were asked where their organization is reducing budgets or spending in 2026, primary areas cited were reducing marketing spend (26%), pausing new hires (22%), and decreasing staff / outsourcing to vendors (13%). In the U.S., 20% of TMC professionals expect a decrease in staffing and 26% anticipate pausing on new hires.

Affordability, Border Mobility and Traveler Safety Lead 2026 Concerns

  • Travel buyers are most concerned about the affordability of business travel (70%), followed by the ease of obtaining entry/exit permissions and visas (65%) and employee safety (56%).
  • Top concerns are relatively consistent across markets and roles. However, affordability (76%) and ease of entry/exit permissions (57%) are noted as most prominent among U.S. buyers. Entry/exit permissions are cited as a high concern particularly among buyers with employees taking more than 10,000 trips per year (79%), as well as among suppliers (72%).
  • Half (52%) of buyers are concerned about TMC service quality, but are slightly less concerned (42%) about overall internal support for the travel program.
  • A notable number of suppliers (45%) are concerned about the willingness of travel and procurement managers to explore and change existing supplier/TMC partners in 2026.
  • In terms of cost and satisfaction, travel buyers most commonly cited as big or major challenges in 2026 balancing cost controls with traveler satisfaction (59%) and prices rising above budget (58%).
  • Protecting business travelers from AI scams is a bigger challenge cited by travel buyers outside the U.S. (36%) versus in the U.S. (14%).
  • For 2026, travel buyers cite missing content in the booking tool (46%), figuring out AI (46%), and leakage (39%) as top operational challenges.

ESTA: Cross-Border Requirements Under Pressure

The U.S. government is proposing stricter ESTA (Electronic System for Travel Authorization) requirements for travelers visiting or transiting the U.S. from 42 currently visa-free countries, including mandatory disclosure of long-term social media, contact and family information, plus possible biometric selfies and a mobile app–only process.

  • These proposed changes threaten to impact visa entry/exit systems and shake confidence in travel to the U.S. Among respondents who say their organization frequently sends employees to the U.S., three in four state they are very (42%) or somewhat (36%) concerned.
  • Industry professionals are most concerned about managing travel to the U.S. (65%), increased challenges associated with sending people to the U.S. (64%), costs of doing business in the U.S. (63%), employee willingness to travel to the U.S. (61%), and challenges of hosting meetings in the U.S. (53%).
  • European travel professionals are particularly concerned about privacy— two in three (67%) say their employees would rather not travel to the U.S. than provide such personal information.
  • As a result of the proposed ESTA requirements, many respondents say their companies are more likely to hold more meetings outside the U.S. (43%), decrease near-term business travel to the U.S. (29%), decrease U.S. travel over the long term (25%), and change travel policies to limit U.S. travel (19%).
  • Buyer, supplier and TMC respondents also feel employees may be less willing to travel to the U.S. (64%), and that planning U.S. travel is unpredictable and risky (60%).

Business Travel AI: Automation or Transformation?

  • For artificial intelligence initiatives in 2026, industry professionals cite pricing optimization (65%) and predictive analytics (64%) as the areas of highest interest. In addition, buyers believe AI’s current impact is primarily improving buyer data analysis and internal storytelling (45%) and automating reporting and analytics (42%).
  • Interest in AI-driven predictive analytics and dynamic pricing is significantly higher for buyers outside the U.S. (69%) than in the U.S. (59%).
  • Looking ahead five years, buyers, suppliers and TMCs expect AI to deliver moderate improvements to automation (56%), with fewer expecting significant transformation (27%) of their responsibilities.

Metodología
The online poll was conducted from January 5-18, 2026, and drew responses from 571 GBTA members and non-members across North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, Latin America, Africa, and the Middle East. Respondents represented organizations with global, regional, and local responsibilities, and a wide range of business travel spend profiles.

For more information and to access the full poll results, visit Investigación GBTA. For more information, contact research@gbta.org.

Acerca de GBTA 
La Asociación Mundial de Viajes de Negocios (GBTA) is the world’s premier business travel and meetings trade organization serving stakeholders across six continents. GBTA and its 9,000+ members represent and advocate for the $1.57 trillion global business travel and meetings industry. GBTA and the GBTA Foundation deliver world-class education, events, research, advocacy, and media to a growing global network of more than 28,000 travel professionals and 125,000 active contacts.