As geopolitical tensions reshape global travel routes and drive international airfares to record highs, Indian travellers are turning inward with growing conviction. Thrillophilia’s data suggest the shift toward domestic travel is growing faster than expected.
How India's summer travel plans changed after February 28!
357 cancelled flights. Fares that tripled overnight. And a 312% spike in Kashmir searches.
On February 28, 2026, coordinated U.S.-Israel strikes on Iran's military and nuclear infrastructure triggered the most significant aviation disruption in a decade. Within two days, Thrillophilia’s booking data reflected a clear shift in traveller behaviour. This report examines what unfolded next.
The Aviation Impact on Indians
| # | Impact | Detail |
|---|---|---|
| 01 | 357 flights cancelled | In a single day from Indian airports to Gulf and European destinations, per Ministry of Civil Aviation data. |
| 02 | Fares tripled to 6× overnight | Bengaluru–Munich jumped from ₹55K to ₹3.5 lakh. Singapore routes doubled. US-bound fares crossed ₹2 lakh for economy. |
| 03 | 14% of global transit disrupted | Middle East airports handle roughly 14% of worldwide transit, but rerouting added hours and costs across all long-haul corridors. |
| 04 | Cancel-for-any-reason insurance surged | Enquiries for premium travel insurance in India jumped 4× in the first week of March, as per the industry reports. |
The Immediate Demand Shift
Oxford Economics estimates that the conflict could reduce Middle East inbound arrivals by 11 to 27 per cent this year, translating into a loss of 23 to 38 million visitors and up to $56 billion in spending. For Indian travellers planning summer holidays, rising costs quickly changed the equation. A budget of ₹1.2 lakh that once covered a family trip to Dubai now barely pays for airfare, making domestic travel the more practical choice.
India’s Fastest-Rising Summer Destinations
Where Indian travellers are planning to go this summer, based on Thrillophilia search trends
The report reflects Thrillophilia's internal search and enquiry data for March 1–15, 2026, vs. February 13–28, 2026. All figures represent the search intent of multi-day tours only.
| # | Destination | 15-Day Search Surge | Key Segment | Why It's Rising |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 01 | KashmirSrinagar, Gulmarg, Pahalgam | +312% | Families, Couples | Top substitute for Europe holidays. Scenic stays, rising traveller confidence. |
| 02 | LadakhLeh, Nubra Valley, Pangong | +278% | Gen Z, Adventure | Rivalling Iceland in landscape appeal. Dramatically cheaper than European alternatives now. |
| 03 | North East IndiaMeghalaya, Sikkim, Arunachal | +224% | Gen Z, Families | Fastest-growing domestic region in 2025. Conflict accelerating the NE pivot. |
| 04 | SikkimGangtok, Lachen, Pelling | +189% | Couples, Wellness | Clean, calm, compact. The anti-chaos destination travellers want post-conflict anxiety. |
| 05 | Andaman IslandsHavelock, Neil, Port Blair | +171% | Families, Honeymooners | Direct substitute for Maldives and Thailand at a fraction of inflated costs. |
| 06 | GoaNorth Goa, South Goa | +134% | All Segments | Familiar, affordable, zero airfare risk. No-brainer summer alternative for all traveller types. |
| 07 | KeralaAlleppey, Munnar, Wayanad | +112% | Wellness, Families | Anchor wellness destination. Rising as Southeast Asia routes become costlier and uncertain. |
| 08 | Himachal PradeshSpiti, Kasol, Bir, Tirthan | +97% | Gen Z, Couples | Road-trip culture booming. Spiti Valley queries up 3× as Scandinavia-style landscape alternative. |
What Thrillophilia’s Data Shows About the Domestic Travel Surge
Insights from Thrillophilia booking data and traveller behaviour patterns.
The surge in domestic searches is not purely a fear response. Thrillophilia's booking data shows a deep structural shift in how Indian travellers have been evolving, and the conflict has merely accelerated a trend already well underway.
A. Key Platform Metrics (March 2026 vs. Prior Period)
| Metric | Value | What It Signals |
|---|---|---|
| Baseline domestic travel growth (pre-conflict, early 2026) | +14% | Strong organic momentum already underway before any geopolitical event |
| Rise in confirmed multi-day domestic bookings, March 2026 vs. March 2025 | +48% | Conflict-accelerated surge layered on top of organic growth |
| International enquiries converted to domestic bookings (first 2 weeks of March) | 67% | Demand redirection rate — higher than any prior domestic pivot event |
| Average spend on domestic multi-day tours, March 2026 | ₹78K | Up 22% vs. same period last year. This clearly suggests that international budgets are flowing into domestic ones. |
B. Who Is Now Booking Domestic
| Traveller Type | Behaviour Shift |
|---|---|
| Families with school-age children | This segment, which historically split 60/40 between domestic and international, is now booking domestic at 85%+ rates in March 2026 enquiries. |
| Honeymooners & Couples | Maldives and Bali enquiries dropped sharply. Kashmir, Andaman, and Meghalaya have absorbed the redirected demand. |
| Corporate short-break travellers | Gulf-transit uncertainty has pushed the 3–5 day getaway segment entirely domestic. Goa and Coorg are primary beneficiaries. |
| Luxury & Premium segment | Usually outbound-first, now actively exploring high-end Rajasthan, Ladakh camps, and Kerala wellness retreats as meaningful alternatives. |
C. How Trip Design Is Changing
| Trip Design Shift | Change | What It Signals |
|---|---|---|
| Longer trip durations | 6.2 → 8.4 nights | Travellers treating this as a proper holiday replacement, not a compromise |
| Higher hotel categories (3★ → 4★ upgrades, boutique) | +38% | Domestic is no longer the "budget option" — international budgets upgrading the experience |
| Single-base itineraries (e.g. Kashmir Valley, Havelock Island) | Dominant | Travellers want depth over coverage — not multi-city rushes |
| Custom & semi-custom tour enquiries | +54% | Travellers want trip quality, not headcount savings — private tours over groups |
Segment-Wise Travel Behaviour
Who Is Driving the Domestic Surge — and What They Want
The shift is happening differently across traveller groups. Each segment is responding to its own motivations and showing clear destination preferences. Thrillophilia's multi-day booking data helps reveal these patterns with precision
Segment A — Families (Ages 35–55)
The single largest beneficiary destination is Kashmir for this group which is seen as a direct Europe alternative. North East India and Andaman follow.
- Key driver: price certainty and absence of airfare volatility
- Domestic enquiry conversion in March: +61%
- Booking pattern: comfort-first, single-base, private transfers
Segment B — Gen Z & Young Professionals
Ladakh is the defining shift — searches up 278%. Spiti Valley and Meghalaya follow. This group is leaning into the "India has its own Scandinavia" narrative.
- Ladakh + Himachal searches up 312% in 15 days
- Spiti Valley searches up 340% — on track to be the breakout destination of Summer 2026
- Prefer adventure + experience-led itineraries over checklist sightseeing
Segment C — Honeymooners & Couples
Maldives and Bali substitute queries are flowing toward Andaman (beaches + seclusion) and Kerala (houseboats + wellness). Meghalaya emerging as an offbeat romantic destination.
- Andaman honeymoon queries up +171% in March 1–15
- Privacy-led stays and boutique property requests up sharply
- Slower pacing and fewer destinations preferred over landmark-heavy circuits
Segment D — Luxury & Premium Travellers
India's premium travellers are actively seeking luxury Ladakh camps, Rajasthan palace experiences, and Kerala wellness retreats at ₹20,000+ per night as viable Europe substitutes.
- Average booking value up 22% in domestic luxury segment
- Custom itineraries only — zero tolerance for generic packages
- Heritage properties and boutique lodges seeing 3× the inquiry volume
The Bigger Picture
India Was Already Heading Here. The Conflict Accelerated the Clock.
Thrillophilia experts suggest domestic travel momentum in India was already at historically elevated levels before February 28, 2026. The geopolitical shock did not create a new trend; instead, it compressed a 2-year trajectory into 15 days.
A. The Pre-Existing Foundation (2024–2025)
| Trend | Data Point | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Kashmir bookings | +35% YoY in 2025 | Already the fastest-recovering destination in North India — now experiencing a demand step-change |
| North East India bookings | +31% YoY in 2025 | Highest-momentum domestic region heading into 2026, even before the conflict |
| Goa domestic arrivals | 10 million in 2025–26 | Thrillophilia reflects this ongoing shift more strongly in March 2026 |
| Avg. domestic tour duration | 5.8 → 6.4 nights (2024 to early 2026) | Indians were already choosing depth over coverage before the conflict |
B.What Is Powering the Domestic Travel Surge
- India's growing middle class: 100M+ new aspirational travellers entered the market 2020–2025. For many, domestic premium travel is the natural first step.
- Infrastructure investment: Rishikesh–Karnaprayag railway. New terminals in Srinagar, Agartala, Pakyong. 1,400 special summer trains. Access has been transformed.
- Premium accommodation supply: Boutique, luxury, and heritage properties in India's nature destinations grew 40%+ between 2022–2025. Supply is ready to absorb the surge.
- Maturing travel culture: Indian travellers are deeply experience-oriented. Domestic India, once the "compromise," is now experienced as extraordinary.
Forward View
What to Watch: The Signals That Will Define Summer 2026
Based on current booking trajectories, Thrillophilia's demand intelligence points to three clear signals that will shape how this summer season unfolds for domestic Indian tourism.
| Signal | Indicator | What to Watch |
|---|---|---|
| Capacity constraints | High probability | Kashmir, Ladakh, and Andaman on track to see inventory constraints by April 15 for peak summer dates. Demand outpacing 2025 availability. |
| Decision conversion rate | ~60% committed | Of undecided summer customers have now confirmed domestic bookings per March 2026 data. Decisive pivot underway. |
| Average domestic spend | ₹90K projected | Projected average spend per multi-day domestic booking in May–June 2026 — highest domestic spend on record. International budgets flowing domestic. |
What Thrillophilia Data Suggests Next
- Destination to watch — Spiti Valley: Searches up 340% — We believe it is on track to become the breakout destination of Summer 2026. It is an alternative to Iceland or Scotland in visual drama and adventure.
- Format to watch — India Luxury Escapes: The ₹1.5–3 lakh per couple domestic premium segment is growing at 3× the rate of standard bookings. Heritage and boutique property ecosystem absorbing outbound luxury spend.
- Traveller to watch — The Converted International Traveller: Families who book domestic this summer and have a great experience may not revert to the same international patterns post-conflict. This is a structural conversion, not a temporary detour.
Methodology & Data Notes
About Thrillophilia & This Report
About Thrillophilia: Thrillophilia is India's leading AI-powered multi-day tours platform, having operated over 76,000 multi-day trips across domestic and international destinations. With over 210,000 travellers in its 2025 dataset, Thrillophilia's booking intelligence represents one of the most granular real-travel datasets in Indian leisure tourism.
Data Sources
- Search & Enquiry Data: The 15-day surge figures (March 1–15 vs. February 13–28, 2026) are derived from platform-level search session volumes, tour page engagement depth, and direct enquiry submissions for multi-day tour packages. These are qualified travel-intent signals, not raw web traffic.
- Booking Data: All confirmed booking figures reflect finalised, paid multi-day tour bookings. Independent hotel, flight, or activity bookings are excluded.
- Traveller Data: All traveller data is aggregated and anonymised. No personally identifiable information is used.
Limitations
- Search surge figures reflect traveller intent signals observed across digital platforms and should be interpreted as directional indicators rather than confirmed booking volumes.
- The comparison period has been aligned across two equal 20-day windows (March 1–15 versus February 13–28) to maintain consistency and avoid seasonal distortion.
- The findings are intended to highlight emerging travel interest patterns and directional movement, not to represent market share or final transaction outcomes.
- This analysis is focused exclusively on consumer leisure travel behaviour and does not include business travel, corporate movement, MICE activity, or inbound international travel.