New Priceline.com Survey Finds Millennials on the Cusp of Travel-Buying Spree

It’s only February, and already millennial Americans are deep in the grips of old-fashioned cabin fever.  According to a new survey commissioned by priceline.com, a leader in online and mobile travel, and part of The Priceline Group (NASDAQ: PCLN), last-minute getaways are the favored trip type for the new year, and young Americans aren’t afraid to open their wallets wide for that “special” vacation.

Almost half (49%) of all Americans who didn’t take a last-minute vacation in 2014 say they regret it.  But it’s the millennials who are most eager to do something about it.  Seventy-three percent of millennials say they are likely to take a last-minute vacation in 2015.  In total, 58 percent of Americans surveyed say they agree that a last-minute 2015 getaway is in the cards.

  • Forget about waiting until summer.  Forty percent said they’ll most likely kick off their travel on the Valentine’s Day long weekend (Feb. 14-16), with Easter running close behind (32%) and St. Patrick’s Day (11%).  With the year-end holidays barely in the rear-view mirror, only six percent said they planned to travel over the recent Martin Luther King, Jr. national holiday.
  • And here’s a warning to bosses.  Sixty nine percent of millennials have no problem telling a “tall tale” (I’m sick, my kid’s sick, my car got stolen, someone close to me died, etc.) in order to play hooky and get away from the office for a few days.  This is in sharp contrast with Americans in other age groups, where less than half (45%) would fib to take a vacation.
  • Lovers in last-minute paradise.  The survey also uncovered plenty of “triggers” to plan a spur-of-the-moment getaway this year. But, Americans would be most willing to plan a last-minute vacation for a romantic getaway (55%) – followed by a surprise celebration, such as a birthday (42%), a guys or girls getaway (25%), a wedding (19%) or to attend a sporting event (18%).  Last-minute travelers will also spend more freely for these types of trips.  For example, 56 percent said they will make reservations at an ultra-luxurious 5-star hotel for a romantic getaway, while 22 percent will splurge for someone’s birthday.

Priceline.com said it believes that mobile services like the priceline.com travel app are helping fuel this wanderlust by making it easy to reserve everything from a hotel, to a flight and rental car, in a few touches on a smartphone or tablet.  “As comfort levels with mobile travel reservations continue to rise in 2015, travelers will increasingly be on the lookout for last-minute travel ideas, deals and technology – we call this seizing the Travel App-ortunity,” said John Caine, priceline.com’s Chief Product Officer.  “Last-minute travel is when priceline.com’s relationships across the travel industry and our dedication to mobile app innovation really come into play.  In fact, our exclusive mobile deals are so popular that we’ve partnered with hotels to add another 2,000 deals for our mobile customers.”

For more information, please visit www.priceline.com/media or connect with priceline.com on Facebook and Twitter.

About priceline.com

Priceline.com, part of The Priceline Group (NASDAQ: PCLN), gives leisure travelers multiple ways to save on their airline tickets, hotel rooms, rental cars, vacation packages and cruises. In addition to getting compelling published prices, travelers can take advantage of priceline.com’s famous Name Your Own Price® service, which can deliver the lowest prices available, or the recently added Express Deals®, where travelers can take advantage of hotel discounts without bidding.

About the Survey

The Priceline.com Last-Minute Travel Survey was conducted by Wakefield Research (www.wakefieldresearch.com) among 1,000 nationally representative U.S. adults, ages 18+, between January 8 and January 14, 2015, using an email invitation and an online survey.  Quotas have been set to ensure reliable and accurate representation of the U.S. adult population 18+.  For the interviews conducted in this particular study, the chances are 95 in 100 that a survey result does not vary, plus or minus, by more than 3.1 percentage points from the result that would be obtained if interviews had been conducted with all persons in the universe represented by the sample.

For press information: Flavie Lemarchand-Wood at press@priceline.com.

SOURCE priceline.com