Travel loyalty programmes have become ubiquitous. The average frequent traveller belongs to multiple airline, hotel and OTA loyalty schemes, yet most customer decisions are still driven by price, convenience and availability, not points.
That creates a growing challenge for travel brands. If loyalty programmes are no longer enough to drive meaningful preference for most customers, what actually builds loyalty in travel today?
Our latest insight explores why the future of travel loyalty is no longer purely about rewarding transactions. It is about shaping decisions, influencing behaviour, and strengthening customer relationships across the entire travel journey.
Customers increasingly expect value in the moment, not long-term accumulation. Many perceive traditional points systems as unfair, overly complex or disconnected from the actual travel experience. Digital comparison tools, OTAs and AI-powered search are shifting control of discovery and demand away from brands themselves.
This means travel loyalty programmes can no longer operate as isolated rewards engines. To create competitive advantage, loyalty must become embedded into the broader commercial and customer experience strategy.
The most effective travel loyalty strategies are moving beyond points and tiers toward what we call the “SPEND” model, a loyalty system designed to influence behaviour before, during and between trips.
The battle for loyalty increasingly starts before customers even choose a destination.
Today, travel discovery primarily takes place through social channels, search, and increasingly AI. Winning brands are repositioning loyalty platforms as trip planning ecosystems, helping customers discover destinations, build itineraries and engage earlier in the journey.
This shifts loyalty from passive rewards to active demand creation.
True loyalty is created through relevance, recognition and experience, especially when things go wrong.
Leading travel brands are using customer data to personalise journeys, tailor benefits to trip context, and proactively improve disruption recovery. The result is stronger emotional connection, reduced price sensitivity and lower distribution costs.
Traditional travel rewards programmes are often designed around frequency alone. The next generation focuses on expanding total customer value. That means using loyalty data to personalise ancillaries, upgrades, bundles and dynamic offers, while extending redemption opportunities across the travel experience.
The opportunity is not simply to drive more trips, but to increase the value and profitability of every trip taken.
Most travel loyalty programmes reward historic behaviour. Leading brands are increasingly investing based on future potential.
By identifying high-value customer signals earlier, through trip behaviour, booking patterns and engagement data, brands can allocate investment more effectively and deepen relationships with the customers most likely to drive long-term value.
Recognition creates stronger relationships than entitlement alone.
One of the biggest structural weaknesses in travel loyalty is infrequent engagement.
Customers may only interact with travel brands a handful of times each year, limiting opportunities to influence behaviour and build habit.
The most effective loyalty programmes create ongoing relevance through ecosystems, partnerships, everyday earning opportunities, personalised challenges and visible value tracking. This keeps brands front-of-mind between travel moments and increases share of wallet over time.
Some of the most advanced loyalty thinking is emerging outside travel. Gaming platforms excel at using small, frequent rewards, behavioural triggers and future value modelling to drive engagement and retention. Food delivery platforms create habitual engagement through ecosystems, subscriptions, streaks and embedded value.
These strategies demonstrate that loyalty works best when it becomes an always-on behavioural system rather than a periodic rewards programme.
Travel brands can apply many of the same principles to improve engagement, economics and customer experience simultaneously.
The next era of travel loyalty will not be won through bigger points balances or more complex tier structures.
It will be won by brands that:
In short, loyalty only works when everybody wins.
Our latest report explores how travel brands can redesign loyalty programmes to create stronger customer relationships, improve commercial performance and build sustainable competitive advantage.
Download the full report for the complete analysis and strategic recommendations.
Partner
Partner & Global Head of Analytics
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