Most Americans Say Sustainable Travel Is Important
A new survey from The Vacationer shows that 225 Million American adults (87.32%) say sustainable travel is either somewhat important or very important to them. Nearly 82% say they will make more sustainable (eco-friendly) decisions when planning travel, while more than 78% say they would pay more to lower their carbon footprint. Compared to last year's survey, Americans are taking sustainable travel more seriously and are willing to spend more money to do their part.
The Vacationer anonymously polled, via SurveyMonkey, 1,096 American adults on March 1, 2022. Results were analyzed by The Vacationer's Eric Jones, who is an Assistant Professor of Mathematics at Rowan College South Jersey. The survey was conducted before Earth Day to gauge feelings on sustainable and eco-friendly travel.
Last year's sustainable travel survey showed that 82.67% believed sustainable travel was important. This year's figure shows 87.32%, which is 4.65% more people. Of that figure, 53.10% say it is somewhat important, while 34.22% say it is very important.
81.57% of American adults plan to make more sustainable (eco-friendly) decisions when planning travel. Of that figure, 29.84% say they will make the decisions regardless if it inconveniences them, while 51.73% will do it only if it does not inconvenience them. Last year's survey showed 74.85% planned on making more sustainable travel decisions, with 26.55% saying they would do it regardless if it inconveniences them.
As many as 202 million Americans are willing to spend more money to travel sustainably. Last year's survey only showed 71.37% were willing to spend more, so this is a notable increase. Nearly 12% say they are willing to spend $250 or more.
While most people care about sustainable travel, cost and convenience still come first.
81.84% either think there are not enough sustainable travel options or simply do not know. Only 18.16% believe there are enough options. Nearly 2 out of 10 people use sustainable travel filters when booking, while over 80% do not or do not know the filters even exist.