How tourism trends are reshaping holiday letting
Op-ed: Sam Steel examines how changing guest expectations, emerging technology and evolving travel behaviours are reshaping the future of holiday letting
The holiday letting industry has always evolved alongside tourism trends, but few periods have brought change as rapidly as the last several years.
Traveller expectations are shifting. Technology is transforming the guest experience. Booking patterns are becoming less predictable. At the same time, operators are navigating rising costs, stronger competition and increasing pressure to deliver higher service standards.
For management rights businesses, these changes are doing more than influencing occupancy levels, they are reshaping how holiday accommodation is managed, marketed and operated.
This article was first published in the June edition of Resort News read it HERE
The modern traveller has changed
Perhaps the most significant shift is the changing mindset of the modern traveller.
Today’s guests expect far more than simply a clean room and a convenient location. Convenience, flexibility, communication and overall experience now play a major role in how travellers choose accommodation. Guests now compare properties against global hospitality standards shaped by hotels, short-term rental platforms and major travel brands.
The guest journey begins long before arrival. Online reviews, social media presence, website quality, response times and booking simplicity all influence purchasing decisions. Travellers often form opinions about a property before ever stepping through the front door.

As a result, operators are being forced to think beyond traditional accommodation management and place greater focus on the overall guest experience.
Booking behaviour is also changing. Travellers are booking later than they once did. Economic uncertainty, flexible work arrangements and changing travel habits have shortened booking windows and made demand patterns harder to predict. Traditional seasonal trends are becoming less reliable, creating new challenges around staffing, pricing and operational planning.
Domestic tourism continues to play a larger role across many markets following the travel shifts of recent years. At the same time, the gradual return of international visitors is creating both new opportunities and renewed competitive pressure for many destinations.
Operators are now balancing the needs of local, long-stay and international travellers with very different expectations and booking behaviours.
Remote and flexible work have also introduced new travel behaviours. Increasingly, guests are blending work and leisure, extending stays and travelling outside traditional peak periods. Coastal and regional destinations, in particular, are benefiting from travellers seeking lifestyle experiences rather than purely short-term holidays.
For operators, this shift presents opportunity but also requires adaptation. Reliable internet, functional workspaces, seamless communication and flexible accommodation experiences are becoming increasingly important for guests who may be working remotely during their stay.
Operators are also becoming more data-driven. Real-time occupancy analysis, dynamic pricing strategies and forecasting tools are helping accommodation providers respond faster to changing demand and maximise revenue opportunities. Technology once primarily used by large hotel groups is now becoming more accessible across the holiday letting sector, allowing smaller operators to make faster and more informed commercial decisions.
Technology is reshaping operations
Technology is playing a central role in this transformation.
Digital check-in systems, automated guest communication, smart locks, channel management platforms and AI-driven pricing tools are now common across the holiday letting sector. While these systems improve guest convenience, they are also helping operators reduce administration, improve efficiency and manage rising labour pressures.
Technology is no longer a luxury investment. In many cases, it is becoming essential operational infrastructure.
Operators relying heavily on manual systems may struggle to meet the expectations of travellers accustomed to instant communication and frictionless digital experiences across daily life.
Staffing challenges continue to place pressure on many operators, particularly across cleaning, maintenance and guest services. In some tourism regions, labour shortages and rising wage costs are forcing businesses to rethink how they structure operations and manage service delivery. This is accelerating the adoption of automation and streamlined systems designed to reduce administrative workload while maintaining service standards.

Read the latest edition of AccomNews HERE
Why Gen Z matters
One of the biggest long-term shifts shaping the industry is the rise of Gen Z travellers.
Unlike previous generations, Gen Z places strong emphasis on experience, authenticity, flexibility and digital convenience. They are far more likely to discover accommodation through social media, prioritise visually appealing spaces and make booking decisions based heavily on online content and reviews.
For many younger travellers, the accommodation itself has become part of the travel experience rather than simply a place to stay.
This is influencing apartment styling, amenities, communication expectations and marketing strategies. Properties that feel modern, unique and visually appealing are increasingly performing well online, particularly across platforms driven by short-form content and mobile browsing.
Gen Z travellers also expect fast communication, seamless check-in, strong wifi and responsive service. Slow replies, outdated presentation or poor digital experiences can quickly impact booking decisions.
Younger travellers are also showing stronger interest in personalised and local experiences. Many are looking for properties that feel more connected to the destination offering an authentic travel experience.
For holiday letting operators, this creates opportunities to showcase local attractions, lifestyle experiences, dining and community-focused tourism as part of the overall guest journey.
Social media is also having a growing influence on tourism demand. Destinations can rise in popularity almost overnight through online exposure, while guest expectations are increasingly shaped by what travellers see across Instagram, TikTok, YouTube and travel content platforms.
Professional photography, strong presentation and digital branding are no longer optional marketing extras, they are becoming essential competitive tools.

At the same time, profitability pressures are forcing operators to become more strategic in how they manage revenue.
Online travel agents remain important for visibility and occupancy, but high commission structures are driving many businesses to focus more heavily on direct bookings, repeat guest relationships and database marketing. The ability to generate repeat business without relying entirely on third-party platforms is becoming increasingly valuable as margins tighten.
As competition continues to grow, many accommodation businesses are recognising the importance of building their own brand identity rather than relying entirely on third-party booking platforms. Guest databases, loyalty strategies, direct communication channels and strong digital branding are becoming valuable long-term assets. Operators who successfully build repeat guest relationships are often better positioned to protect profitability and reduce reliance on rising commission costs.
Sustainability is becoming commercially important
Guests are becoming more conscious of environmental responsibility. Energy-efficient buildings, reduced waste and environmentally responsible operations are no longer simply marketing features, they are increasingly shaping guest perception and long-term operating costs alike.
For many operators, sustainability initiatives are proving commercially beneficial as well as environmentally responsible. Guests expect higher standards, owners expect stronger financial performance, and operators are being required to balance service, efficiency, technology and profitability simultaneously.
The holiday letting industry increasingly resembles a modern hospitality business rather than a traditional accommodation model. Success now depends on far more than occupancy alone.
Operators are being required to combine guest experience, technology, marketing, operational efficiency and financial performance into a far more sophisticated business model than many have managed historically.
The management rights businesses that thrive in the years ahead will likely be those that adapt quickly to changing traveller behaviour while maintaining operational discipline and strong guest experiences.
Tourism trends will continue to evolve. Economic conditions will shift. But one thing is becoming increasingly clear: the future of holiday letting will belong to operators who can adapt quickly, deliver consistently strong guest experiences and build scalable, technology-enabled businesses that evolve alongside modern traveller expectations.