How remote-work normalization reshapes hotel stay patterns. Bleisure travel outpacing leisure recovery by 18 months with 42% longer average stays.
Executive Summary
The permanent shift to hybrid and remote work has fundamentally altered travel demand patterns. Bleisure — the blending of business and leisure travel — has emerged as the fastest-growing travel segment, outpacing pure leisure recovery by 18 months. This study analyzes booking data, traveler surveys, and property-level revenue impacts across the Americas.
Key Metrics
- 42% longer average length of stay for bleisure travelers vs. traditional business travelers
- 28% higher total guest spend per trip (combining business and leisure components)
- 3.2x growth in bleisure-specific booking volume since 2022
- Product gap — 73% of hotels lack dedicated bleisure packages or workspace amenities
Who Is the Bleisure Traveler?
Our survey of 4,200 business travelers reveals three distinct bleisure segments:
Revenue Implications
Properties actively serving bleisure travelers report 22% higher RevPAR compared to those relying on traditional business travel. The revenue uplift comes from longer stays (reducing turnover costs), higher ancillary spend (F&B, spa, local tours), and improved off-season occupancy. However, most hotels have not adapted their product, pricing, or marketing to capture this demand.
Recommendations
- Create dedicated bleisure packages — combine workspace amenities with leisure credits, flexible cancellation, and extended-stay pricing.
- Invest in workspace infrastructure — co-working lounges, ergonomic in-room workstations, and reliable high-speed internet are table stakes.
- Adjust revenue management — bleisure travelers book earlier and stay longer; pricing strategies should account for total trip value rather than per-night rates.
Bleisure is not a niche — it is the new mainstream of business travel. Hotels that adapt their product, pricing, and marketing to serve this segment will capture outsized market share in the coming years.