How India Travelled in 2025: Thrillophilia Multi-Day Travel Index

Published using aggregated, anonymised data from multi-day leisure trips planned and operated by Thrillophilia.

Overview:

This report examines how Indian leisure travellers travelled in 2024 and 2025, based on multi-day trips that were planned, booked, and completed through Thrillophilia. The focus is on data based consumer behaviour rather than interest shown in search.

The data shows that the Indian leisure travel sector is becoming more thoughtful in how trips are planned and experienced. Travellers across age groups, preferences, and budgets are moving away from rushed, checklist-style itineraries and towards journeys that prioritise comfort, pacing, and clarity of execution. Tourists now prefer fewer destinations per trip, a fulcrum point instead of multiple destinations and hotels, and more realistic, relaxing, and thoughtful daily planning across domestic and international travel destinations.

Custom and semi-custom trips now account for a large share of multi-day travel and are no longer limited to premium or niche segments. Domestic travel continues to drive demand, while short-haul international destinations have emerged as the fastest growing destinations due to ease of access, shorter flight times, and predictable on-ground experiences. Across all travel segments, value is increasingly judged by how smoothly a trip runs rather than by headline price alone.

Insight: Together, these patterns point to a maturing travel market in which trip design and execution quality are playing a central role in shaping travel demands and trends.

Section 1: About This Index

1.1 What This Index Measures

The Thrillophilia Multi-Day Travel Index measures how Indian leisure travellers actually planned and undertook multi-day trips over a defined period, based on executed travel rather than intent or aspiration.

This index is designed to answer a simple but critical question:

Where, how, and in what formats did Indians actually travel when they committed to a multi-day journey?

A. What Qualifies as a “Multi-Day Trip” in This Index

For the purpose of this index, a multi-day trip is defined as:

  • A leisure itinerary involving two or more consecutive nights
  • Covering one or multiple destinations
  • Planned and booked as a single, end-to-end journey
  • Undertaken for leisure purposes, including holidays, honeymoons, family trips, wellness travel, and experiential travel

Key characteristics of qualifying trips:

  • Includes overnight stays (minimum 2 nights)
  • Includes a planned daily structure (sightseeing, activities, or experiences)
  • Includes logistics coordination across days (accommodation, transfers, experiences)
  • Has a defined start and end date

What does not qualify:

  • Day trips or single-activity bookings
  • Standalone hotel stays without an itinerary
  • Flights booked without an accompanying multi-day plan
  • Transit stopovers without structured travel
This ensures the index reflects journey-level travel decisions, not isolated purchases.

B. What is Included in This Index?

The index is built using aggregated, anonymised data from multi-day tours that were planned, booked, and operated within the index window.

Included data signals cover:

1. Executed Multi-Day Leisure Trips

  • Domestic multi-day trips within India
  • International outbound multi-day trips from India
  • Trips across all traveller types: solo, couples, families, and groups
Only trips that moved beyond planning and resulted in confirmed bookings are included.

2. Itinerary Design & Modification Behaviour

  • Number of nights and destinations
  • Changes requested before booking (pace, hotels, routing)
  • Preference shifts observed across traveller segments
This helps understand how travellers structured their trips, not just where they went.

3. Traveller Segmentation Signals

  • Gen Z & young professionals
  • Families
  • Honeymooners & couples
  • Luxury & premium travellers
  • Wellness & slow-travel seekers
This allows the index to reflect who travelled where, not just overall volume.

4. Destination-Level Demand Patterns

  • Relative popularity of destinations
  • Movement of destinations up or down rankings over time
  • Emergence of new or previously niche destinations
Destinations are ranked relative to each other, rather than reported as raw counts.

C. What is Explicitly Excluded?

To maintain clarity and comparability, the following are not included in this index:

  • Search intent without booking
  • Browsing behaviour on listings or marketplaces
  • Standalone flight bookings
  • Standalone hotel bookings
  • Activities or attractions booked independently
  • Business travel, MICE, or corporate offsites
  • Inbound foreign tourist travel to India
Excluding these ensures the index reflects deliberate leisure travel decisions, not fragmented, subjective, or exploratory behaviour.

D. How Does This Index Differ from Tourism Board Data?

Tourism board data typically measures:

  • Tourist arrivals
  • Hotel occupancy
  • Footfall at destinations
  • Border entries or airport traffic

While useful at a macro level, such data does not explain:

  • Trip structure
  • Traveller intent
  • Length of stay patterns
  • Traveller segment preferences

In contrast, this index measures:

  • Trip-level behaviour
  • Traveller-led decision patterns
  • How journeys are designed and experienced
It answers why travellers went somewhere, not just that they arrived.

E. How Does This Index Differ from OTA or Marketplace Data?

Online travel agencies (OTAs) and marketplaces primarily reflect:

  • Individual product transactions (flights, hotels, activities)
  • Price-led comparison behaviour
  • High-volume, low-context bookings

This index differs in three key ways:

  • Journey-Level View: It analyses complete multi-day journeys rather than isolated components.
  • Execution-Based Signals: It reflects trips that were actually taken, not just searched or listed.
  • Format & Segment Focus: It captures how different traveller types plan and experience travel, not just what they purchase.

As a result, the index reveals structural travel patterns that are often invisible in component-level data.

F. Why This Matters

Multi-day travel represents the highest-intent, highest-commitment form of leisure travel.

By focusing exclusively on this category, the index provides:

  • A clearer picture of how Indian leisure travel is evolving
  • Early signals of destination momentum
  • Insight into changing traveller priorities across age and income groups

This makes the index particularly relevant for:

  • Media and industry analysts
  • Destination marketers
  • Tourism boards
  • Travel ecosystem stakeholders

1.2 How This Index Is Built

The Thrillophilia Multi-Day Travel Index compares how Indian travellers booked and travelled in 2025 versus 2024, based only on confirmed multi-day leisure trips.

The purpose is simple:
To identify what changed in destinations, traveller segments, and trip formats year-on-year.

A. Timeframe & Scope

  • Comparison: 2024 vs 2025
  • Coverage:
    • Domestic India
    • International outbound travel from India
  • Trip type: Leisure multi-day travel (2+ nights)

B. Data Used

Only trips that were booked, paid for, and travelled are included.

The analysis uses:

  • Multi-day tour bookings
  • Destination-level booking trends
  • Traveller group composition (families, couples, Gen Z, luxury, wellness)
  • Trip structure (duration, number of destinations, hotel category)

C. How Trends Are Measured

All insights are expressed as:

  • Year-on-year growth or decline (%)
  • Trends in destination rankings

This allows us to clearly state, for example:

  • Which destinations grew faster in 2025
  • Which traveller segments expanded or slowed
  • How trip design preferences shifted

D. What Is Excluded

To avoid distortion, the index does not include:

  • Search or browsing data
  • Standalone flights or hotel bookings
  • Activities booked independently
  • Business or corporate travel

Note: Only multi-day leisure trips that actually happened are analysed.

E. Why This Approach Works

By comparing real travel in 2024 vs 2025, this index reflects revealed traveller behaviour, not intent or aspiration.


1.3 How to Read the Rankings

All rankings in this report reflect actual multi-day leisure trips booked and travelled during the comparison period. They are designed to show relative preference and travel momentum, not absolute market size.

A. What “Top 10” Means

  • Destinations are ranked out of 10, based on overall booking share in 2025
  • Only multi-day leisure trips are considered
  • Rankings indicate where Indians travelled the most, not where they searched the most

B. What “Fastest Growing” Means

  • Destinations showing the highest year-on-year growth from 2024 to 2025
  • Growth is measured on actual bookings, not listings or page views
  • A destination can be fast-growing even if it is not yet among the largest

C. What “Loved by” a Traveller Segment Means

  • Reflects destinations that saw disproportionate growth within a specific traveller group
  • For example: Gen Z, families, honeymooners, luxury or wellness travellers
  • Indicates increasing preference, not just popularity

D. Why Rankings Are Used Instead of Raw Numbers

  • Rankings allow clean comparison across destinations
  • Avoid distortion caused by base size differences
  • Make trends easier to interpret for readers

E. What Rankings Do Not Represent

  • They are not tourism arrival statistics
  • They do not reflect search interest or online browsing
  • They are not endorsements or recommendations

Section 2: The Big Shifts In Indian Leisure Travel

2.1 How Indian Leisure Travel Has Changed Since 2023

Indian leisure travel between 2023 and 2025 did not merely rebound in volume, it changed in character. Across multi-day trips booked and travelled, three clear behavioural shifts stand out.

A. From Checklist Travel to Experience-Led Travel

Till 2023, a large share of itineraries were designed to cover maximum places in minimum time. By 2025, travellers increasingly chose to do less, but experience more.

Observed patterns (2024 - 2025):

  • Fewer destinations per trip, but longer stays in each
  • Decline in rushed, landmark-heavy itineraries
  • Rise in experience clusters (nature, culture, food, adventure)
  • Increase in trips designed around experiences rather than city counts
  • Growth in itineraries with one primary base instead of frequent hotel changes
  • Higher acceptance of itineraries that deliberately include downtime or buffer days
What this signals:
Indian travellers are no longer optimising for “how many places we can see”, but for how meaningful and comfortable the journey feels.

B. From Group-Heavy to Personalised & Semi-Custom Itineraries

Group travel still exists, but it is no longer the default choice. Travellers increasingly moved towards personalised or semi-custom multi-day tours in 2024 and 2025.

Observed patterns:

  • Higher demand for itineraries tailored especially around:
    • Family composition
    • Pace preferences
    • Hotel comfort levels
    • Reducing daily travel time
    • Adjusting sightseeing density
  • Decline in large, rigid group schedules
  • Faster growth in custom and semi-custom tours compared to fixed group departures
  • Group tours increasingly concentrated in budget-sensitive segments only
What this signals:
Indian travellers now expect trips to adapt to them, not the other way around.

C. From Price-Led to Outcome-Led Decisions

While price remains important, it is no longer the primary decision driver in multi-day travel. Since 2023, travellers increasingly prioritised final outcome and experience over the lowest visible cost.

Observed patterns:

  • Higher willingness to accept price differences in exchange for:
    • Better hotels
    • More realistic itineraries
    • Clear on-ground support
  • A sharp decline in bookings driven purely by discounts
  • Increased acceptance of higher-priced itineraries when execution clarity was higher
  • Fewer cancellations on well-defined, slower-paced trips
  • Shift in customer queries from “Can this be cheaper?” to “How will this be executed?”
What this signals:
Travellers are optimising for peace of mind, not just savings, especially for family and international travel.

2.2 What Stayed the Same

While Indian leisure travel evolved in meaningful ways after 2023, not everything changed. Several foundational patterns remained stable and continue to anchor multi-day travel demand. These constants provide context to the shifts outlined earlier and explain why certain destinations and formats continue to perform as strongly.

A. Core Domestic Demand Remained Strong

Domestic travel continued to form the backbone of Indian multi-day leisure trips.

Observed patterns:

  • A significant share of multi-day trips remained within India
  • Domestic destinations continued to attract first-time travellers and repeat visitors equally
  • Seasonal peaks (summer, festive periods) remained unchanged
  • Continued preference for destinations that allow easy logistics and shorter travel times
  • Stable demand for hill stations, heritage circuits, and nature-led regions
Why this matters:
Domestic travel remains a major section of multi-day trips and acts as the stabilising force during global uncertainty.

B. Seasonal Family Travel Persisted

Despite changes in trip design and spend behaviour, seasonal families travel patterns did not change significantly.

Observed patterns:

  • Booking volumes peaked around predictable calendar periods
  • Summer and festive windows remained the highest-demand periods
  • Advance planning cycles for families remained longer than other segments
  • Families continued to avoid shoulder seasons unless trips were short-haul
  • Trip duration during school holidays remained longer than off-season travel
Why this matters:
Family travel is still calendar-driven, even though the manner and nature of travel has evolved.

C. Short-Haul Asia Tours Continued to Dominate Outbound Travel

Short-haul Asian destinations retained their position as the most accessible and reliable outbound choices for Indian travellers.

Observed patterns:

  • Southeast Asia and nearby short-haul international destinations like Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia, Bali and neighbouring regions remained top preferences
  • Visa simplicity and flight duration continued to influence decisions
  • Repeat travel to familiar short-haul destinations remained high
  • Strong family and Gen Z preference for short-haul international trips
  • Shorter decision cycles compared to long-haul destinations
Why this matters:
Short-haul Asia continues to offer the best balance of affordability, convenience, and experience density for Indian travellers.

Section 3: The Traveller Segments Redefining Indian Leisure Travel

3.1 Gen Z & Young Professionals (Ages ~23–35)

This segment showed the sharpest behavioural change between 2024 and 2025. The shift is not about where Gen Z travels alone, but how frequently, how intensely, and why.

A. Trip Structure & Timing Preferences (2025 vs 2024)

Behaviour Metric Change What It Signals
Weekend-heavy & short-break travel (4–6 nights)+43%Trips planned around work schedules
Long annual vacations (10+ nights)–12%Decline of once-a-year long holidays
Multiple trips per year+51%Higher travel frequency
Off-season travel+39%Greater flexibility and price awareness
Remote-work enabled itineraries+34%Travel combined with working days

What this shows:
Gen Z is travelling more frequently but for shorter durations, structuring trips around work schedules, flexibility, and the ability to travel outside peak seasons rather than committing to one long annual holiday.

B. Experience & Itinerary Design Preferences

Behaviour Metric Change What It Signals
Adventure & experience-led itineraries+58%Experiences driving destination choice
Nightlife, events & after-dark experiences+47%Demand for curated evenings
Cultural immersion & food-led travel+42%Shift away from tourist-only circuits
Landmark-heavy sightseeing–14%Declining appeal of checklist travel
Flexible daily pacing+49%Clear rejection of overpacked days

What this shows:
Gen Z prioritises experience quality per day over sightseeing volume, favouring flexible pacing, cultural experiences, and curated activities over landmark-heavy itineraries.

C. Spending & Value Perception

Behaviour Metric Change What It Signals
Value-for-money optimisation+52%Willingness to pay for better outcomes
Budget-only travel–9%Lower focus on cheapest options
Mid-premium hotels / hostels+38%Comfort preferred over low cost
Shared accommodations–16%Declining tolerance for inconvenience

What this shows:
Gen Z remains cost-aware but is increasingly willing to spend for comfort, better planning, and smoother execution, signalling a shift away from purely budget-driven travel.

D. Destination Behaviour Patterns*

Behaviour Metric Change What It Signals
Southeast Asia travel+54%High experience density and accessibility
First-time destination experimentation+48%Openness to newer destinations
Repeat visits to the same destination–24%Preference for novelty
Long-haul aspiration travel+12%Present, but limited

What this shows:
Gen Z outbound travel growth is centred on short-haul destinations with high experience value. Interest in new destinations is rising, while repeat travel is declining. Long-haul travel remains aspirational and selective.

*Repeat travel remains skewed toward a few destinations such as Goa, Thailand, and Himachal.

E. Top Domestic Destinations Loved by Gen Z (India, 2025)

(Ranked by booking preference & growth momentum)

Rank Destination YoY Growth Why It Grew
1Himachal Pradesh

(beyond Shimla–Manali)

+41%Road trips, treks, offbeat stays
2Uttarakhand+38%Adventure, wellness, short breaks
3Goa (experience-led)+34%Cafés, surf, slow travel
4Meghalaya+46%Nature-led, first-time exploration
5Sikkim+32%Clean destinations, calm itineraries
6Ladakh+29%Landscape-led adventure
7Kashmir+27%Improved confidence and scenery
8Coorg & Western Ghats+25%Nature stays and slow weekends
9Rajasthan+22%Festivals and culture
10Andaman Islands+19%Island novelty and water activities

What this shows:
Gen Z domestic travel growth is concentrated in mountain, nature-led, and offbeat regions that support short trips, flexible pacing, and experience-driven itineraries rather than metro-centric tourism.

F. Top International Destinations Loved by Gen Z

Short-Haul International (Highest Volume)

Year-on-Year Change: 2025 vs 2024

Rank Destination YoY Growth Why It Grew
1Thailand+44%High experience density, nightlife + adventure
2Indonesia (Bali)+39%Culture, surf, wellness, flexible trip lengths
3Vietnam+51%First-time exploration, value, food culture
4Singapore+28%Events, concerts, short structured trips
5Sri Lanka+33%Compact itineraries, surf + culture
6Malaysia+26%Easy logistics, urban + nature mix
7Philippines+48%Visa tailwinds, island hopping, novelty
8Hong Kong+21%Events, nightlife revival, short breaks
9Georgia+36%Visa-free access, culture + nightlife
10Japan+24%Culture, safety, aspirational short trips

What this shows

Gen Z travel growth follows clear patterns rather than broad trends. Momentum is strongest in destinations with short flight times, high experience value per day, and strong first-time appeal. Destinations such as Vietnam, the Philippines, and Georgia represent a new wave of Gen Z travel interest, while repeat-heavy destinations continue to grow at a slower pace where novelty is limited.

Long-Haul Gen-Z Travel Destinations (Lower Volume, Higher Spend)

Year-on-Year Change: 2025 vs 2024

Rank Destination Country YoY Growth Why It Grew
1Europe (multi-country trips)+24%Culture-rich cities, rail travel, café culture, festivals, social media appeal
2Kenya+18%Safari experiences, nature travel, bucket-list adventure
3Australia+16%Beach lifestyle, adventure sports, English-speaking ease
4South Korea+19%K-pop, beauty culture, street food, youth trends
5Iceland+21%Northern Lights, road trips, dramatic landscapes

What this shows:
Long-haul Gen Z travel remains lower in volume but higher in spend and intent, driven by culture, pop influence, and unique experiences rather than frequency.

G. Preferred Gen-Z Trip Formats

Trip Format YoY Trend
Hybrid (adventure + culture + leisure)Strong growth
Adventure-led tripsHigh growth
Culture & lifestyle tripsSteady growth
Landmark-only sightseeingDeclining

What this shows:
Hybrid itineraries that combine adventure, culture, and leisure have become the default for Gen Z, while landmark-only sightseeing formats continue to lose relevance.

3.2 Families (Ages ~35–55)

Between 2024 and 2025, families emerged as the most stable and fastest-growing contributor to multi-day travel. Unlike Gen Z, family travel is not driven by experimentation, it is driven by risk management, comfort, and predictability.

3.2.1 How Families Plan & Decide

A. Planning Behaviour (2025 vs 2024)

A. Planning Behaviour (2025 vs 2024)

Behaviour MetricChangeWhat It Signals
Advance planning (30–90 days)+16%Families plan earlier to reduce uncertainty
Custom or semi-custom itineraries+21%One-size-fits-all trips increasingly rejected
Itinerary revisions before booking+18%Active involvement in pacing & comfort decisions
Last-minute bookings–11%Lower tolerance for uncertainty
Fixed large group tours–18%Declining relevance for families

What this shows:
Family travel plans are increasingly well thought out, with longer planning cycles, higher involvement in itinerary design, and a clear preference for certainty over spontaneity.

B. Comfort vs Coverage

Preference ShiftChangeWhat It Signals
Comfort-first itineraries+19%Comfort outweighs destination count
Fewer destinations per trip+14%Preference for depth over coverage
Multi-city rushed itineraries–18%Clear rejection of fast pacing
Day trips from a single base+22%Reduced fatigue for children & elders

What this shows:
Families no longer measure trip value by how much they cover, but by how smoothly the trip runs. Families increasingly prioritise comfort over coverage, choosing fewer destinations, slower pacing, and day trips from a single base to reduce fatigue for children and elders. Multi-city rushed itineraries continue to decline, showing that smooth execution and manageable days matter more than packing in more stops.

C. Core Decision Hierarchy for Family Travel

(Ranked by importance based on booking behaviour)

  • Predictability of execution
  • Pace suitable for children & elders
  • Hotel quality & room comfort
  • On-ground support availability
  • Price (only after the above are satisfied)

This hierarchy is consistently reflected in itinerary acceptance, modification requests, and cancellations avoided.

3.2.2 Family Preference Patterns (2025 vs 2024)

Preference PatternChangeWhat It Signals
Slower pacing & realistic routing+17%Families reject over-packed itineraries
Premium & trusted hotel categories+19%Comfort outweighs marginal savings
Child- & elder-friendly experiences+23%Multi-generation suitability matters
Private / semi-private transfers+11%Safety & reduced fatigue prioritised
Single-city or limited-city trips+14%Depth preferred over coverage
Multi-city rush itineraries–18%Clear decline in appeal

What this shows:
Families clearly prefer comfort, safety, and low-fatigue travel, with stronger preference for slower pacing, trusted hotels, and child- and elder-friendly experiences. Demand also shifts towards private logistics and limited-city routing that reduces transitions, while fast, multi-city rush itineraries see a clear decline as families prioritise depth and smooth execution over maximum coverage.

3.2.3 Outcomes of Trip Structure Observed

Fewer Transitions, Longer Stays

Families increasingly design trips with:

  • Fewer hotel changes
  • Longer stays per city
  • Day trips instead of overnight hops
  • Built-in rest buffers

Resulting outcomes (2025 vs 2024):

  • Increase in average trip duration
  • Higher per-night hotel spend
  • Fewer on-trip escalations and complaints

Hotels Became Non-Negotiable

Higher acceptance for:

  • Larger room categories
  • Central or well-connected locations
  • Known hotel brands or trusted properties

Strong resistance observed to:

  • Unbranded budget hotels
  • Location-compromised stays
  • Frequent hotel switching

Hotels are now viewed as a risk-management choice, not a discretionary upgrade.

Safety & Support Trump Everything

Family travellers increasingly ask:

  • “Who do we contact if something goes wrong?”
  • “Is this transfer reliable with kids?”
  • “What happens if flights are delayed?”

Observed correlation:

  • Higher booking conversion is associated with clearer support communication.
  • Lower cancellation rates on well-explained itineraries

This reinforces the shift toward accountability-led trip selection.

3.2.4 Top Domestic Destinations for Family Travel (India, 2025)

Ranked by booking preference, consistency & YoY growth — 2025 vs 2024

RankDestinationYoY GrowthWhy Families Chose It
1Rajasthan+28%Heritage hotels, easy logistics, multi-generation appeal
2Kerala+31%Wellness, backwaters, slower pacing, safe travel
3North East India (multi-state)+42%Nature-led, longer stays, rising confidence for families
4Himachal Pradesh+26%Hill stations, road accessibility, predictable itineraries
5Uttarakhand+24%Spiritual + leisure mix, short-break friendly
6Ladakh (family-friendly itineraries)+33%Shift from adventure to comfort-led family travel
7Andaman Islands+22%Island novelty, safe water activities, compact plans
8Sikkim+19%Clean destinations, calm pace, scenic stays
9Kashmir+37%Improving confidence, scenic stays, and family-paced itineraries
10Goa (leisure-led)+18%Resorts, relaxed itineraries, not nightlife-driven

What this shows:
Families increasingly favour comfort-first, low-friction destinations with predictable routing and better stays. North East India and Ladakh emerge as structural risers as family confidence improves, while Kashmir shows late but sharp recovery-led momentum.

3.2.5 Top International Family Destinations

Short-Haul International

Year-on-Year Growth: 2025 vs 2024 ( no order)

RankDestinationYoY GrowthWhy It Works for Families
1Singapore+34%Theme parks, safety, short flight time
2Thailand+29%Family resorts, flexible itineraries
3Abu Dhabi+41%Theme parks, clean infrastructure, predictable ops
4Malaysia+23%Easy logistics, urban + nature mix
5Sri Lanka+27%Compact routes, nature + culture
6Dubai+6%Shopping, resorts, familiarity
7Indonesia (Bali)+19%Villa stays, slower family pacing
8Hong Kong+27%Events, Disneyland, short city breaks

What this shows:
Short-haul family travel clusters around destinations that reduce disruption risk through short flights, strong infrastructure, and highly structured experiences like theme parks and resort-led stays, while familiarity-driven demand remains steady but grows slower.

Long-Haul International (Lower Volume, Higher Spend)

Year-on-Year Growth: 2025 vs 2024

RankDestinationYoY GrowthWhy Families Chose It
1Europe (selective, slower circuits)+32%Fewer countries, longer stays, comfort-led touring
2Japan+39%Safety, cleanliness, cultural depth
3Australia+14%English-speaking ease, nature + cities
4Kenya & South Africa+35%Safari-led, once-in-a-lifetime family trips
5United States (West Coast & National Parks)+21%Road trips, theme parks, multi-gen suitability

Key insight:
Long-haul family travel in 2025 grew not in frequency, but in confidence — fewer trips, higher spend, deeper planning.

3.2.6 Preferred Family Trip Formats

Trip FormatYoY TrendNotes
Leisure & sightseeing-led tripsStrong growthSlower pacing, fewer transitions
Theme park-centric tripsHigh growthEspecially Singapore & Abu Dhabi
Nature & slow travelStrong growthKerala, Kashmir, Europe, NZ
Fast-paced multi-city toursDecliningFatigue & risk concerns

What this shows:
The fastest-growing family formats are the ones that reduce execution risk, which is why single-base leisure, theme-park breaks, and slow nature itineraries outperform multi-city touring.

3.3 Honeymooners & Couples

Honeymoon and couple travel remains one of the most emotionally driven segments, but between 2024 and 2025, it became far more intentional and differentiated. This cohort moved decisively away from cliché destinations and rushed sightseeing, towards privacy, pacing, and memorable experiences.

3.3.1 What Defines Honeymoon Travel Today

A. Structural Shifts in Honeymoon Travel (2025 vs 2024)

Behaviour ShiftYoY ChangeWhat It Indicates
Custom & semi-custom honeymoon itineraries+47%Couples want trips built around them, not templates
Privacy-led accommodation choices+42%Villas, boutique hotels, unique stays preferred
Landmark-heavy sightseeing–19%Declining appeal of checklist honeymoons
Slower pacing & fewer destinations+38%Depth over coverage
Shorter honeymoons (5–7 nights)+29%Minimoons + later long trips
Ultra-luxury, high-cost honeymoons–8%Value & experience > pure opulence

What this shows:
Honeymoon travel shifts towards personalised, privacy-first trips built around couples, not templates. Villas and boutique stays rise, while landmark-heavy sightseeing declines. Couples prefer fewer destinations with slower pacing, and they lean more towards 5–7 night minimoons. Ultra-luxury softens slightly as experience value outweighs pure opulence.

B. What Couples Optimise For (Observed Booking Behaviour)

PriorityYoY ChangeWhat Matters Most
Privacy & exclusivity+24%Less crowding, more personal space
Experience-led days (sunset cruises, safaris, slow travel)+21%Shared memories > sightseeing
Romantic accommodation upgrades+36%Better rooms, views, locations
Nightlife-centric travel–11%Losing relevance for honeymoons
Discount-driven choices–14%Emotional value outweighs savings

What this shows:
Couples increasingly optimise for privacy, personal space, and experience-led days that create shared memories rather than packed sightseeing. Romantic stay upgrades see the strongest lift, showing higher willingness to pay for better rooms, views, and locations. Nightlife-first plans and discount-driven choices decline, signalling that emotional value now outweighs savings.

3.3.2 Top Honeymoon Destinations — India

Ranked by booking preference & YoY growth (2025 vs 2024)

RankDestinationYoY GrowthWhy It Resonates
1Kerala+39%Backwaters, wellness, slow pace
2Kashmir+31%Scenic beauty, romantic stays, recovery in confidence
3Andaman Islands+34%Seclusion, beaches, water experiences
4Himachal Pradesh+26%Mountain stays, boutique hotels
5Meghalaya+44%Offbeat romance, nature & novelty
6Rajasthan+22%Palace stays, heritage romance
7Sikkim+24%Calm pace, scenic intimacy
8Goa (leisure-led)+19%Boutique resorts, relaxed itineraries
9Ladakh+21%Adventure-romance hybrids
10Uttarakhand+18%Hill escapes, short romantic breaks

What this shows:
Honeymoon demand clusters around destinations that naturally support privacy, scenic stays, and slower pacing, with strong momentum in nature-first and offbeat choices like Meghalaya and the islands. Kerala and Andaman remain consistent anchors for calm, stay-led romance, while Kashmir’s rise reflects improving confidence and growing preference for romantic, comfort-led itineraries over rushed sightseeing.

3.3.3 Top Honeymoon Destinations — International

Overall Top International Honeymoon Destinations
(Ranked by booking preference & YoY growth, 2025 vs 2024)

RankDestinationYoY GrowthWhy Couples Choose It
1Thailand+33%Romantic resorts, privacy, affordability
2Indonesia (Bali)+36%Villas, wellness, slow romance
3Maldives+27%Privacy, overwater villas, milestone honeymoons
4Sri Lanka+29%Compact routes, culture + beaches
5Vietnam+41%Novelty, scenic cruises, value
6Switzerland+24%Classic romance, scenic rail journeys
7Italy+21%Culture, food, slow city stays
8Japan+26%Clean, safe, culturally rich
9South Africa+31%Safari + wine + coastline
10Greece+19%Island romance, boutique stays

What this shows:
International honeymoon demand clusters around destinations that offer privacy-led stays and experience-rich days with predictable execution. Short-haul leaders combine resort or villa formats with compact routing, while long-haul picks skew towards milestone romance built on scenic journeys, culture, and once-in-a-lifetime experiences.

Short-Haul vs Long-Haul Honeymoon Split

CategoryYoY TrendInsight
Short-haul internationalStrong growthPreferred for quicker, flexible honeymoons
Long-haul internationalModerate growthChosen for milestone or once-in-a-lifetime trips
Domestic honeymoonsSteady growthIncreasing quality & privacy appeal

What this shows:
Honeymoon growth is strongest in short-haul trips that allow quicker, flexible breaks with lower travel fatigue. Long-haul remains a milestone choice, taken less frequently but with higher intent, longer planning, and deeper stay-led experiences, while domestic demand stays steady as privacy and trip quality improve.

3.4 Luxury & Premium Leisure Travellers

Luxury travel remains a smaller-volume but high-impact segment within Indian multi-day travel. Between 2024 and 2025, luxury demand did not expand through extravagance, it expanded through precision, privacy, and control.

3.4.1 What Luxury Means Now (Not Just Hotels)

Luxury travel in 2025 is no longer defined primarily by:

  • Hotel star ratings
  • Brand names alone
  • Excessive itinerary coverage

Instead, it is defined by how well a trip fits the traveller’s intent.

Key Behavioural Shifts (2025 vs 2024)

Luxury Behaviour ShiftYoY ChangeWhat It Indicates
Custom-built itineraries+26%Luxury travellers reject templates
Privacy-led accommodations+21%Villas, lodges, boutique stays preferred
Fewer destinations per trip+28%Depth over coverage
Landmark-heavy sightseeing–17%Experiences valued over checklists
Private guides & transfers+4%Control and comfort prioritised
Price-led decision making–13%Outcome matters more than cost

What this shows:
Luxury travel is increasingly defined by control and fit, with stronger preference for custom-built itineraries, privacy-led stays, and fewer destinations per trip. Checklist sightseeing and price-led decision making decline, showing that time efficiency, comfort, and execution certainty matter more than visible extravagance.

3.4.2 Top Luxury Domestic Destinations (India)

Ranked by premium booking share & YoY growth — 2025 vs 2024

RankDestinationYoY GrowthWhy It Attracts Luxury Travellers
1Rajasthan+34%Heritage palaces, experiential stays
2Kerala+29%Wellness retreats, backwaters, privacy
3Ladakh+41%Luxury camps, remote landscapes
4Andaman Islands+26%Secluded beaches, premium resorts
5Uttarakhand+12%Wellness & Himalayan luxury lodges
6Sikkim+14%Boutique mountain stays, slow travel
7Himachal Pradesh+19%Private hill retreats

What this shows:
Luxury domestic demand clusters around destinations that naturally support seclusion and controlled experiences, including heritage stays, remote landscapes, and privacy-led retreats. The strongest performers align with slower pacing and high-comfort trip design rather than high-coverage touring.

3.4.3 Top Luxury International Destinations

Ranked by YoY growth in premium multi-day bookings (2025 vs 2024)

RankDestinationYoY GrowthWhy Luxury Demand Grew
1Italy+27%Slow travel, food & culture immersion
2Switzerland+18%Scenic rail, luxury alpine stays
3Japan+33%Precision, safety, curated experiences
4South Africa+19%Safari lodges, wine estates
5Kenya+42%Ultra-premium safaris
6France+5%Boutique hotels, culinary travel
7Greece+12%Island villas, slow island hopping
8Australia+11%Nature-led luxury, long stays
9Maldives+18%Privacy-first, milestone travel
10Scandinavia+27%Nature immersion, low-density luxury

What this shows:
Luxury international growth concentrates in destinations that enable curated, experience-first travel such as scenic rail journeys, safari-led formats, and low-density, privacy-heavy stays. Demand rises where premium outcomes feel predictable and personalised, with strong momentum in milestone-style itineraries.

Short-Haul vs Long-Haul Luxury Split

CategoryYoY TrendInsight
Short-haul luxuryModerate growthChosen for quick, controlled indulgence
Long-haul luxuryStrong growthPreferred for milestone & experiential travel

What this shows:
Short-haul luxury grows through compact, controlled breaks that deliver comfort with minimal complexity. Long-haul luxury grows faster because it is treated as milestone travel, with fewer trips but higher intent, deeper itineraries, and more experiential formats.

3.4.4 Common Luxury Trip Characteristics

Observed Luxury Trip Design Patterns (2025)

Trip CharacteristicYoY ChangeWhy It Matters
Custom itineraries only+26%Zero tolerance for generic plans
Private transfers & guides+14%Comfort, flexibility, control
Fewer destinations (1–3 max)+28%Time valued over coverage
Premium experiential activities+21%Safari, cruises, rail journeys
Longer stays per location+25%True immersion
Fast-paced touring–22%Explicitly rejected

What this shows:
Luxury travel in current times is defined by control and precision, with strong preference for fully customised, low-transition itineraries that prioritise time, comfort, and premium experiences, while fast-paced coverage-led touring is consistently rejected.


3.5 Wellness & Slow-Travel Seekers

Wellness and slow travel moved from a niche category to a distinct planning mindset between 2024 and 2025. Travellers increasingly used multi-day trips for recovery, balance, and longevity, not just leisure.

This segment cuts across age groups but is especially strong among:

  • Urban professionals
  • Families seeking restorative breaks
  • Luxury travellers prioritising health outcomes

3.5.1 Rise of Wellness-Led Travel

Key Behavioural Shifts (2025 vs 2024)

Wellness BehaviourYoY ChangeWhat It Indicates
Wellness-led multi-day trips+24%Wellness is now a primary trip driver
Longer stays at a single location+19%Healing over sightseeing
Digital-detox & low-activity itineraries+21%Fatigue with hyper-packed travel
Spa & Ayurveda-centric itineraries+16%Preventive health focus
Landmark-heavy sightseeing–21%Clear rejection among wellness travellers
Multi-city fast travel–26%Slow travel preferred
What this shows:
Wellness travel increasingly functions as an intentional recovery format, with higher preference for stay-led trips, longer single-location breaks, and lower-activity, digital-detox itineraries. Spa and Ayurveda-led programs gain share as preventive health becomes a key driver, while landmark-heavy sightseeing and fast multi-city routing decline sharply.

3.5.2 Top Wellness Destinations in India

Ranked by wellness-led booking growth & consistency (2025 vs 2024)

RankDestinationYoY GrowthWhy It Leads
1Kerala+27%Ayurveda, retreats, water-led calm
2Uttarakhand+12%Yoga hubs, Himalayan retreats
3Coorg & Western Ghats+13%Forest stays, coffee estates
4Himachal Pradesh (offbeat)+9%Mountain quietude, slow itineraries
5Sikkim+6%Clean environments, scenic stillness
6Rajasthan (heritage retreats)+11%Palace-based wellness, privacy

What this shows:
Indian wellness travel clusters around nature, silence, and structured healing, not sightseeing hubs.

3.5.3 Top International Wellness Destinations

International Wellness Destinations (2025 vs 2024)

RankDestinationYoY GrowthWhy It Resonates
1Sri Lanka+39%Ayurveda, coastal calm, compact travel
2Indonesia (Bali)+14%Yoga, retreats, spiritual tourism
3Thailand+18%Wellness resorts, detox programs
4Japan+11%Onsen culture, mindful living
5Bhutan+26%Mindfulness, low-impact tourism
6Italy (countryside)+6%Slow food, rural wellness
7Switzerland+19%Alpine retreats, nature immersion
8Austria+3%Stable demand, spa towns, thermal wellness

What this shows:
International wellness growth in 2024-2025 clusters around destinations that offer compact routing or stay-led recovery formats, with strong wellness infrastructure and low-friction execution, rather than sightseeing-heavy travel.

Section 4: Destination League Tables — Where Indians Travelled Between 2024–2025

While traveller segments and trip formats explain how Indians travelled, destination rankings show where demand actually concentrated in 2025. These league tables are based on confirmed multi-day leisure trips and reflect relative preference and momentum rather than absolute tourist arrivals.

The rankings below should be read as indicators of sustained demand, recovery, or acceleration across destinations, shaped by accessibility, trip design suitability, and traveller confidence.


Top 15 Domestic Destinations — Overall Demand

Rank Destination YoY Growth Why It Continues to Perform
1 Kerala +19% Strong appeal across families, wellness travellers, and couples
2 Rajasthan +17% Depth of heritage experiences and a strong hotel ecosystem
3 Himachal Pradesh +14% Year-round demand and road-trip friendly circuits
4 North East India +31% Breakout growth driven by first-time and experience-led travel
5 Uttarakhand +13% Combination of spiritual, leisure, and short-break travel
6 Kashmir +35% Strong recovery supported by rising traveller confidence
7 Goa +21% Shift towards leisure-led, resort-based travel
8 Ladakh +31% Transition from adventure-only to family and luxury formats
9 Andaman Islands +11% Island novelty with controlled, consistent demand
10 Sikkim +12% Clean destinations and calm, well-paced itineraries
11 Coorg & Western Ghats +11% Nature-led slow travel demand
12 Tamil Nadu +18% Temple circuits combined with leisure travel
13 Maharashtra +16% Short breaks, hill stations, and weekend travel
14 Karnataka +17% Mix of heritage, hills, and wildlife
What this shows: Domestic demand in 2025 increased for destinations that support slower pacing, diverse trip formats, and provided reliable on-ground experiences. Regions offering versatility across traveller segments continued to perform consistently.

4.2 Top Short-Haul International Destinations

(Destinations under ~6–7 hours flight time from India. Ranked by overall multi-day travel demand; year-on-year change shown for context)

Short-haul international destinations continued to account for the largest share of outbound multi-day travel in 2025. Ease of access, visa clarity, and compact itineraries played a major role in sustaining demand.

Top Short-Haul International Destinations (2025)

Rank Destination YoY Growth Why It Performs
1Thailand+21%Versatile across Gen Z, families & couples
2Singapore+24%Family-friendly, events & theme parks
3Abu Dhabi+36%Experience clustering, premium infrastructure
4Malaysia+16%Urban + nature mix, easy logistics
5Sri Lanka+25%Compact routes, culture + beaches
6Dubai+2%Largely stable demand, familiarity, shopping, resorts
7Indonesia (Bali)+6%Wellness, villas, slow travel
8Hong Kong+18%Events, Disneyland, short city breaks
9Vietnam+31%First-time exploration, strong momentum
10Philippines+39%Visa tailwinds, island experiences
11Georgia+14%Visa-free access, culture + nightlife
12Nepal+17%Short spiritual & nature breaks
13Bhutan+21%Wellness & low-impact travel
14Japan (short-duration itineraries)+36%Safety, culture, selective demand
15France5%Selective city trips driven by culture and repeat travel
What this shows: Short-haul demand remains driven by predictability, experience density, and manageable trip durations rather than price alone.

4.3 Top Long-Haul International Destinations

(7+ hours flight; Ranked by overall multi-day demand across all traveller segments)

Long-haul travel remained lower in volume but higher in intent and average spend. Growth was concentrated in destinations that support slower pacing, experiential depth, and longer stays.

Top 15 Long-Haul International Destinations (2025)

Rank Destination YoY Growth Why It Attracts Demand
1Europe (selective multi-country)+27%Custom pacing and cultural depth
2Switzerland+23%Scenic rail journeys and family appeal
3Italy+16%Food, culture, and slow city travel
4Spain+11%Boutique stays and countryside travel
5Japan+39%Safety, cleanliness, and cultural depth
6South Africa+23%Safari, wine, and coastal combinations
7Kenya+35%High-end safari-led experiences
8Australia+12%Nature-led travel and English-speaking ease
9New Zealand+14%Scenic road trips and slow travel
10United States+10%National parks and West Coast itineraries
11Greece+18%Island hopping and boutique stays
12Spain+17%Culture and leisure mix
13Scandinavia+25%Nature immersion experiences and summer demand
14Iceland+39%Landscape-driven experiential travel
15Austria+16%Alpine slow travel and lakeside stays
What this shows: Long-haul growth in 2025 was driven by experience-led and well-paced itineraries rather than high-frequency travel.

4.4 Fastest-Climbing Destinations

(Relative movement based on year-on-year demand acceleration. No absolute numbers; directional pattern only)

Domestic – Fastest Climbers

  • North East India and Sikkim
  • Ladakh
  • Kashmir

International – Fastest Climbers

  • Vietnam
  • Philippines
  • Iceland
  • Japan
  • Kenya
  • Scandinavia

Section 5: Trip Format Index — How People Are Travelling

While destinations explain where Indians travelled, trip formats explain how those journeys were planned and executed.

Between 2024 and 2025, the most meaningful shifts in multi-day travel were structural rather than geographic. Changes in customisation, duration, and pacing played a larger role in shaping travel outcomes than destination choice alone.

This section outlines how Indian travellers structured their trips in 2025 and how those structures evolved year-on-year.

5.1 Custom vs Group Travel

Relative Preference Shift (2025 vs 2024)

Trip Format YoY Change What Changed
Custom / Tailor-made tours +18% Became the most preferred format across families, luxury travellers, and honeymooners, driven by the need for control and flexibility
Semi-custom tours +16% Chosen by travellers seeking flexibility while keeping costs predictable
Fixed small-group tours +11% Continued relevance, largely within more price-sensitive traveller segments
Large group / bus tours –21% Sharp decline due to rigid schedules, fatigue, and limited personalisation
What This Means: Custom travel formats are no longer restricted to premium or niche travellers. They are increasingly the default choice across multiple segments. Group tours continue to exist, but are largely sustained where price sensitivity is high and traveller expectations are limited.

5.2 Trip Duration Trends

Trip Length Distribution (2025 vs 2024)

Trip Duration YoY Change Who Drives This
Short trips (3–5 nights) +24% Gen Z and working professionals managing limited leave
Medium trips (6–9 nights) +19% Families, couples, and wellness travellers seeking balanced itineraries
Long trips (10–14 nights) +14% Long-haul travel and milestone trips planned with intent
Very long trips (15+ nights) –9% Decline outside a small set of luxury or extended-stay travellers
What This Means: Travel frequency increased between 2024-2025, but average trip length compressed. Medium-length trips of 6 to 9 nights emerged as the most preferred format, balancing time availability with meaningful travel experiences. Longer trips are now planned purposefully with better experiences rather than occurring by default.

5.3 Pacing & Itinerary Design Trends

A. Slower vs Rushed Itineraries

Pacing Preference YoY Change Behavioural Insight
Slower, realistic pacing +21% Preference for reduced fatigue and more comfortable daily schedules
Balanced pacing +19% Viewed as an acceptable middle ground across traveller segments
Rushed, over-packed itineraries –17% Increasingly rejected due to physical and mental fatigue
What This Means: Travellers increasingly questioned long daily travel times, early-morning starts, late finishes, and tightly packed sightseeing schedules. Comfort and realism now play a central role in itinerary acceptance.

B. Single-Base vs Multi-City Trips

Trip Structure YoY Change Why It Changed
Single-base trips with day excursions +36% Fewer transitions, less packing, and more rest
Two-city trips +21% Limited variety without excessive movement
Multi-city (4+ stops) itineraries –24% Higher fatigue, greater logistical risk, and lower comfort
What This Means: Trips with fewer hotel changes and longer stays per location consistently delivered higher satisfaction and fewer on-trip issues. Travellers increasingly preferred depth over coverage when designing multi-day journeys.

Section 6: Domestic India — Regional Deep Dive

India’s domestic multi-day travel growth since 2023 has not been uniform. Different regions are evolving at different speeds based on access, traveller confidence, trip formats, and the type of experiences they support.

This section highlights what is structurally growing and what has stabilised across major domestic regions.

6.1 North India

Key States & Regions:
Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Kashmir, Ladakh, Rajasthan

What’s Growing

  • Kashmir: Strong recovery-led growth, particularly among families and honeymooners, driven by improved confidence and comfort-led itineraries
  • Ladakh: Clear shift from adventure-only travel to family-friendly and luxury formats
  • Offbeat Himachal & Uttarakhand: Villages, road trips, and slower itineraries gaining preference over mass hill stations
  • Rajasthan (heritage circuits): Premium, experience-led travel replacing checklist sightseeing

Why:

  • Improved traveller confidence and on-ground infrastructure
  • Strong appeal across families, couples, and luxury travellers
  • Destinations that support slower pacing and depth consistently outperform rushed formats

What’s Stabilising

  • Shimla–Manali mass circuits
  • Rushed, multi-city hill itineraries
  • Budget group tours concentrated in peak summer months
Regional Insight: North India remains the backbone of domestic multi-day travel, but growth has clearly shifted from volume-driven travel to quality-led experiences.

6.2 Northeast India

Key States & Regions:
Meghalaya, Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Nagaland (select circuits)

What’s Growing

  • Meghalaya: Among the fastest-climbing destinations nationally, driven by nature-led and first-time travel
  • Sikkim: Clean, calm, and well-paced itineraries seeing steady traction
  • Multi-state Northeast circuits: Longer stays with fewer destinations replacing short sampler trips
  • Strong demand for nature-led and first-time exploration

Why

  • Rising traveller confidence
  • Strong interest from Gen Z and families
  • Preference for offbeat, less crowded destinations with depth

What’s Stabilising

  • Short, rushed “Northeast sampler” trips
  • Single-city visits without sufficient depth
Regional Insight: The Northeast has moved from experimental travel to intentional travel, making it the highest-momentum region in domestic India.

6.3 West & Central India

Key States & Regions:
Rajasthan, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra

What’s Growing

  • Rajasthan: Heritage stays, cultural experiences and slower circuits gaining preference
  • Madhya Pradesh: Wildlife, heritage, and offbeat central India itineraries
  • Maharashtra (Western Ghats, Konkan): Short leisure breaks and slow travel itineraries

Why:

  • Improved accommodation quality across regions
  • Rising interest in culture and nature combinations
  • Increased demand for weekend and short-break travel

What’s Stabilising

  • High-frequency business-leisure overlap travel
  • Large group heritage tours with fixed routing
Regional Insight: West and Central India are benefiting from rediscovery rather than novelty, with travellers returning to familiar regions but with more experience-led expectations.

6.4 South India

Key States & Regions:
Kerala, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Coorg & Western Ghats

What’s Growing

  • Kerala: Strong demand driven by wellness, slow travel, family, and luxury segments
  • Coorg & Western Ghats: Nature-embedded stays and digital detox trips
  • Tamil Nadu: Temple circuits combined with leisure stays
  • Boutique resorts and wellness retreats across the region

Why

  • Strong alignment with wellness, family, and premium travel preferences
  • Destinations support longer stays with fewer transitions
  • Perception of safety, predictability, and reliable infrastructure

What’s Stabilising

  • Fast-paced sightseeing circuits
  • City-heavy itineraries without nature or leisure elements
Regional Insight: South India has emerged as the anchor region for wellness and slow travel, supported by steady, high-quality demand rather than sharp volatility.

Section 7: International Travel — Regional Deep Dive

Indian outbound multi-day travel since 2023 has not expanded evenly across regions. Growth has concentrated in regions that offer ease, experience density, and predictable execution, while others have stabilised into slower, more deliberate demand patterns.

7.1 Southeast Asia

Key Destinations:
Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore

What’s Growing

  • Vietnam & Philippines: Fastest momentum due to first-time travel curiosity
  • Thailand & Bali: Continued dominance across Gen Z, families, and honeymoons
  • Experience-led itineraries: food, nightlife, beaches, wellness
  • Shorter, repeat international trips

What’s Stabilising

  • Pure sightseeing-only city circuits
  • Budget group tours without experiential layering
Regional Insight: Southeast Asia remains the volume engine of Indian outbound travel, driven by high experience-per-day value and low friction.

7.2 Middle East

Key Destinations:
Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Qatar, Oman

What’s Growing

  • Abu Dhabi: Theme parks, family-centric experiences, cultural attractions
  • Resort-led leisure travel
  • Short, high-comfort international breaks

What’s Stabilising

  • Shopping-only Dubai trips
  • High-frequency repeat visits without new experiences
Regional Insight: The Middle East has shifted from transactional travel (shopping) to experience-designed leisure, especially for families.

7.3 Europe

Key Destinations:
Switzerland, Italy, France, Greece, Scandinavia

What’s Growing

  • Selective Europe: Fewer countries, longer stays
  • Scenic rail journeys and countryside travel
  • Family-friendly and luxury-led Europe itineraries

What’s Stabilising

  • 6–8 country “Europe in 10 days” tours
  • Landmark-only sightseeing routes
Regional Insight: Europe is no longer about coverage, it is about curation, pacing, and immersion.

7.4 Africa

Key Destinations:
Kenya, South Africa, Tanzania

What’s Growing

  • Safari-led luxury and family travel
  • Once-in-a-lifetime, milestone trips
  • Combinations of wildlife + wine + coast (South Africa)

What’s Stabilising

  • Budget wildlife tours
  • Short, rushed safari itineraries
Regional Insight: Africa’s growth is high-intent, low-frequency, high-spend, driven by experience depth, not volume.

7.5 Australia, New Zealand & the Americas

Key Destinations:
Australia, New Zealand, United States, Canada

What’s Growing

  • Australia & New Zealand: Nature-led, slow road-trip itineraries
  • USA West Coast & National Parks
  • Multi-generation family travel

What’s Stabilising

  • City-only USA itineraries
  • Business-leisure overlap travel
Regional Insight: These regions attract deliberate, long-planning-cycle travellers seeking space, nature, and familiarity.

Section 8: What This Means For The Travel Ecosystem

The data in this report suggests changes that extend beyond short-term fluctuations. It reflects a structural shift in how Indian leisure travel is being conceived, purchased, and consumed.

8.1 What This Signals About Indian Travellers

Across segments, destinations, and formats, Indian travellers are converging around a few consistent expectations.

Key Signals:

  • Intentional travel is replacing impulsive travel
    Trips are planned with clearer objectives, rest, bonding, wellness, or experiences rather than generic sightseeing itineraries
  • Reliability now outweighs Novelty
    Travellers are willing to try new destinations, but only when execution feels predictable.
  • Time has become the most important currency
    Fewer places, better pacing, and smoother logistics consistently outperform packed itineraries.
  • Value is judged by outcomes, not prices
    Satisfaction, comfort, and peace of mind matter more than absolute cost savings.
What this means:
Indian leisure travel is becoming more intentional and outcome-led, with travellers prioritising reliable execution, smoother pacing, and time efficiency, while value is increasingly measured by comfort and peace of mind rather than lowest price or maximum coverage.

8.2 What Destinations Should Pay Attention To

Destinations that grew consistently between 2023 and 2025 share common traits, not marketing budgets.

What Matters More Than Promotion

  • Ease of movement within the destination
  • Ability to support slower, single-base itineraries
  • Quality and reliability of accommodation
  • Experiences that work across age groups

What Is Losing Impact

  • Landmark-heavy promotion without itinerary context
  • Volume-led tourism strategies
  • One-size-fits-all destination positioning
What this means:
Destination momentum increasingly comes from trip design readiness, not promotion, with stronger growth in places that enable easy movement, slower single-base itineraries, reliable stays, and broad-appeal experiences, while landmark-only messaging and volume-led, generic positioning steadily lose impact.

8.3 How Trip Design Is Changing

Trip design is no longer a backend activity, it is now the core differentiator.

Observed Design Shifts

  • From multi-city rushing to depth-led routing
  • From fixed schedules to adaptive pacing
  • From generic inclusions to experience layering
  • From hotel-first planning to itinerary-first planning

Trips that are more clearly structured tend to see better conversion and lower cancellation rates.

What this means:
The future of leisure travel belongs to well-designed journeys, not assembled packages. The Indian travel market is not just growing , it is maturing. Growth now rewards clarity, pacing, and accountability far more than scale or discounts.

Section 9: Methodology & Definitions

This section outlines how the India Multi-Day Tours Index 2024 was constructed and how it should be interpreted.

9.1 Data Coverage

Timeframe analysed:

  • Calendar years 2024 and 2025 (with directional reference to 2023)

Trip type included:

  • Leisure multi-day trips (2+ nights)
  • Domestic (within India) and international outbound travel

Data sources:

  • Confirmed multi-day bookings
  • Itinerary design and modification patterns
  • Traveller segmentation (family, Gen Z, couples, luxury, wellness)
  • On-ground execution and fulfilment data

NOTE: All data is aggregated and anonymised.

9.2 Definitions

Multi-Day Trip:
A leisure journey involving two or more nights, designed and booked as part of a single itinerary.

Custom / Semi-Custom Trip:
An itinerary adapted to traveller preferences (pace, hotels, routing), even if based on a base template.

Short-Haul International:
Destinations typically within ~5–6 hours of flight time from India.

Long-Haul International:
Destinations requiring an extended flight duration (6+ hours) and longer planning cycles.

Growth / Decline:
Refers to year-on-year pattern in actual booked and travelled trips, not search or intent data.

9.3 Index Construction Logic

  • All rankings and trends are derived from observed behaviour, not surveys or stated preferences.
  • Growth indicators reflect relative movement between 2024 and 2025.
  • “Fastest-climbing” designations indicate acceleration, not absolute volume.
  • Segment-specific insights reflect disproportionate growth within that segment.

NOTE: This ensures that the index reflects revealed demand, not aspirational interest.

9.4 Limitations

  • The index reflects multi-day leisure travel only and does not represent total tourism arrivals.
  • Independent flight-only, hotel-only, or activity-only bookings are excluded.
  • Business, corporate, MICE, and inbound foreign travel are not part of this analysis.
  • Results indicate directional trends, not market share estimates.

Key Findings of the Report

The Thrillophilia Multi-Day Travel Index shows that Indian leisure travel is entering a more mature phase, where the strongest demand is shaped less by hype and more by how a journey feels and runs on-ground. Across all traveller segments, it is observed that visitors increasingly prioritise comfort, pacing, and predictability, choosing fewer destinations, longer stays, and simpler routing over high-coverage itineraries. Custom and semi-custom travel has also become mainstream, reflecting a clear expectation that trips should adapt to traveller needs rather than forcing travellers into fixed formats.

Destination momentum follows the same logic. Regions and countries that support low-friction movement, reliable stays, and experience-led days continue to rise, while rushed multi-city touring and landmark-only travel loses relevance. Domestic demand remains the backbone of multi-day travel, while short-haul international destinations grow fastest due to ease of access and more controllable execution.

Overall, the market is shifting from price-led decisions to outcome-led decisions, where value is measured by smooth execution, support clarity, and how restorative or fulfilling the trip feels. For the travel ecosystem, this signals a clear direction: the future belongs to destinations and operators that design journeys with intention, reduce travel fatigue, and deliver consistent end-to-end experiences.