In Brief: Shearly Reyes provides insights on how hotels can effectively manage and adapt to abrupt changes in global travel patterns, ensuring business continuity and profitability.
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How Hotels can Navigate Sudden Shifts in Global Travel Demand – Image Credit Cendyn
How hotels can stay competitive and capture demand in uncertain times
Global travel demand is entering a period of heightened uncertainty, shaped by shifting traveler sentiment, evolving booking behaviors, and macroeconomic pressures. For hoteliers, this environment presents both challenges and opportunities. Success in 2026 will depend on agility across pricing, marketing, operations, and an emphasis on the guest experience.
To help you prepare, we’ve compiled the key strategies hotels need to respond effectively to changing demand patterns and maintain performance in a volatile travel landscape.
Guarantee flexibility
Traveler anxiety is real. Searches for “cancel for any reason” travel insurance spike during periods of uncertainty, which means people want to book but are hesitant to commit. Hotels can ease that hesitation by leading with flexible cancellation policies, refundable rate options, and low-risk deposit structures across their direct booking channels. When travelers feel protected, they book. Properties that prioritize flexibility in their booking experience consistently see stronger direct conversion rates, especially during volatile demand cycles.
Shorter Booking Windows is the New Normal
STR has noted that uncertainty is pushing travelers into shorter booking windows. At The Lodging Conference Marriott International, CFO Leeny Oberg shared at that 40% of transient business in the U.S. now has a booking window of less than four days, calling it the shortest she’s seen. Revenue management teams should treat this as the new normal, not a temporary blip.
Rather than relying on advance booking curves from prior years, shift focus to capturing last-minute demand through agile rate strategies, tighter pickup monitoring, and promotional offers that activate within compressed windows. The hotels that win in this environment will be the ones reacting in real time, not waiting for pace to catch up to plan.
Revisit your messaging
Demand isn’t disappearing, but what travelers need to hear before they book is changing. In uncertain times, generic “book now” messaging falls flat. Travelers want to know exactly what happens if plans change, what’s included in their stay, and why your property is a safe bet over alternatives.
Audit your website and booking engine copy with fresh eyes: are your cancellation policies front and center or buried in fine print? Do your room descriptions emphasize comfort, flexibility, and value, or are they still using the same language from 2023? Even small shifts, like leading with refundable rate options on your homepage or adding a “travel with confidence” callout near the booking button, can meaningfully reduce drop-off.
If you’re using a CMS like Cendyn’s, this is a good time to leverage dynamic content capabilities to serve tailored messaging based on traveler intent, whether someone is browsing casually or ready to convert.
Watch for macro-cost volatility
Your guests are feeling the squeeze before you are. Higher oil prices ripple through everything a traveler touches before they even reach your property: airfare, gas, groceries, and the general cost of daily life. By the time they’re looking at rates, they’ve already absorbed multiple price increases that make discretionary spending feel riskier. On the operational side, those same fuel costs are hitting your bottom line through energy bills, food supply chains, and distribution expenses.
The challenge for 2026 is twofold: your costs are going up while your guests’ willingness to pay is under pressure. Build that reality into your budgets now. Stress-test your pricing against scenarios where airfare increases suppress long-haul demand or where rising food costs force tough decisions on F&B margins. The properties that plan around cost volatility for both operations and guests will be better positioned to protect rate integrity without pricing travelers out.
Emphasize staycations
When airfare climbs and long-haul travel feels like a financial stretch, travel intent doesn’t disappear, it simply shifts to how far “away” needs to be. That’s a real opportunity for hotels to capture local demand. Instead of competing for fly-in markets, focus on the couple 45 minutes down the road who wants a weekend reset without the stress of an airport.
Build packages that give local and drive-in guests a reason to choose your property over staying home: bundled spa credits, a curated dining experience featuring a local chef collaboration, or a “digital detox” weekend with intentional programming. The key is making the stay feel like a real escape. Promote these offers through geo-targeted campaigns and local partnerships, and make sure your messaging speaks directly to the value of proximity. Rather than offering the lowest rates, hotels in 2026 that win the staycation guest will be the ones that sell an experience worth driving to.
Emphasize security & safety
The outside world may be unpredictable, but your property shouldn’t feel that way. Every creative execution should reinforce the idea that stepping into your hotel means entering a space where everything is taken care of, nothing is uncertain, and the only agenda is comfort.
In times of uncertainty, it’s important to understand the ongoing factors that impact the hospitality industry – but you don’t have to navigate those obstacles alone. At Cendyn, our experts are ready to help your hotel confidently strategize for shifting global demand with data-driven insights and the industry’s leading integrated technology solutions. Contact us today to request a demo and get started.
Shearly Reyes

Shearly Reyes, Director of Media at Cendyn.
About Cendyn
Cendyn is a global hospitality cloud-based technology company that enables hotels to Find, Book, Grow – driving revenue, maximizing profitability, and creating deeper connections with guests through its integrated solutions.
Serving hoteliers for nearly 30 years, Cendyn has over 32,000 customers in more than 150 countries including brands Outrigger Hospitality, Hyatt, IHG, Aman Resorts & Hotels, Relais & Châteaux, Banyan Tree Hotels & Resorts, Coraltree Hospitality, and Onyx Hospitality Group – generating more than $20 billion in annual hotel revenue. The company supports its growing customer base with offices across the globe.
To find out more, visit cendyn.com.
Source: View the original article at Cendyn.













