CA, US & World
Budget Concerns Pivot Americans to "Backyard Summer"
ATLANTA — Summer travel across the United States has officially entered full swing, but brewing economic anxiety is quietly rewriting the rules of the traditional American vacation. According to a newly released consumer pulse report from the subscription travel site Going.com, high inflation and shrinking discretionary cash reserves are prompting households to pivot from an era of spontaneous adventure toward strict fiscal selectivity. While overall passenger volumes remain elevated at airport terminals, data reveals that budget constraints are reshaping how far families are willing to travel and exactly how much they are willing to spend.
The data highlights a profound psychological shift in consumer behavior. This year, 41 percent of surveyed travelers describe their vacation mindset as "selective"—a sharp surge from the 29 percent recorded just last year. For the first time in recent travel cycles, these cautious planners outpace the demographic of travelers who define themselves as "ready and open to unscripted adventure." Going.com spokesperson and travel expert Katy Nastro explained that the broader industry is experiencing a distinct "tale of two travelers," where overall strong airline bookings mask a deepening divide between economic classes.
The primary catalyst for this shift is a stark divergence along household income lines. The report identified budget limitations as the number-one barrier to summer travel for 39 percent of households earning under $150,000 annually. However, families earning $75,000 or less are pulling back the hardest to protect their core finances. Within this bracket, 41 percent of respondents stated they will travel significantly less this season, with one in four planning to cancel trips altogether and another 25 percent opting to stay much closer to home. On average, these cost-conscious travelers are capping their spending limits to cut out $50 to $100 per flight ticket compared to wealthier demographics.
The result of these tighter boundaries is a macroeconomic trend dubbed the "Backyard Summer." To avoid soaring lodging fees, surging rental car rates, and premium international airline tickets, a massive wave of families are substituting overseas itineraries with regional road trips and local staycations. Interestingly, interest in international getaways remains remarkably resilient at 57 percent, hovering roughly parallel to last year's metrics. However, even those venturing abroad are altering their habits by selecting closer destinations, shortening their stays, or looking for heavily discounted airfare packages. Ultimately, the data indicates that while Americans refuse to completely surrender their summer vacations, they are learning to execute them with a hyper-focused eye on the bottom line.
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By: NBC Palm Springs
June 23, 2026


