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Travelers Use AI to Complement Traditional Trip ResearchTravelers Use AI to Complement Traditional Trip Research">

Travelers Use AI to Complement Traditional Trip Research

Alexandra Dimitriou, GetBoat.com
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Alexandra Dimitriou, GetBoat.com
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März 11, 2026

Survey data show 62% of travelers use websites discovered through search engines for travel research, while about half rely on online travel agencies and social media; only 40% reported using AI tools in planning, indicating AI currently complements rather than replaces established discovery channels.

Key findings: how AI fits into travel logistics and decision flow

The 2026 snapshot of traveler behavior emphasizes the role of biologisch search as the primary entry point for itinerary and logistics planning: 52% of respondents used organic search results for research in the past year, compared with 37% who used AI-generated answers. Sponsored listings trailed both organic and AI responses, underscoring that perceived credibility remains a dominant filter when travelers assess options for transport, accommodation, and activities.

Search, discovery and credibility

For transport and itinerary logistics, travelers still prioritize sources they associate with reliability. The breakdown of discovery channels highlights a layered approach:

  • Search engines are used to locate destination pages, transport providers and official timetables.
  • OTAs and aggregators supply comparative pricing and combined logistics (flights + transfers + hotels).
  • Sozial media surfaces experiential information and micro-destinations, useful for activities like fishing, beach stops or marina recommendations.
  • KI tools are frequently used to synthesize options, propose itineraries, and speed up research, but they are rarely the sole decision-maker.

Touchpoints where AI is accepted versus resisted

Travelers welcome AI where it reduces friction—instant scheduling, navigation assistance, and real-time updates—yet prefer human oversight in areas involving local nuance or safety. The report highlights sector-specific preferences:

  • Visitor information centers: AI can triage questions, but local experts remain essential for place-based knowledge and logistics such as port access and marina berthing rules.
  • Hotels: AI-mediated services (contactless check-in, concierge chatbots) are seen as enhancements, not replacements for human service.
  • Conferences and events: AI is valued for navigation, scheduling, and real-time alerts, but attendees still seek face-to-face interactions for networking and complex logistics.

Quantitative snapshot

ChannelShare of travelers using itPerceived helpfulness
Websites via search engines62%Hoch
Organic search results52%Hoch
Online travel agencies / OTAs~50%Medium–High
Social media~50%Medium
AI-generated answers37%Growing
AI planning tools (overall)40%Complementary

Context and recent developments in industry adoption

Several travel industry moves illustrate how AI is being integrated into booking and guest experiences. Providers across sectors are piloting AI to streamline checkout, answer traveler queries, and improve personalization. Examples cited by industry watchers include Agoda deploying an AI chatbot on booking forms to help during checkout, and reports on how China’s super-app ecosystem previews shifts toward AI-driven hotel booking funnels. Meanwhile, airline and infrastructure plays such as Riyadh Air partnering with IBM indicate some carriers are positioning themselves as AI-native in operations and customer engagement.

How this affects destination operators and logistics teams

Destination marketers, SEO managers, visitor services, and hotel brands are advised to treat AI as another distribution and service layer, not a substitute for core credibility signals. Practical considerations include:

  • Maintaining authoritative, up-to-date pages so that organic search remains competitive against AI summaries.
  • Using AI to improve operational logistics—real-time schedule alerts, automated confirmations, and post-booking personalization—while preserving human touchpoints for complex queries.
  • Monitoring how AI answers influence traveler expectations about routes, safety, and local regulations, especially in transport hubs like major airports and seaports.

Historical perspective: AI’s role in travel planning

AI in travel has evolved from rule-based chatbots and simple recommendation engines to large-scale language models and integrated virtual assistants. Early experiments in the 2000s focused on automation of bookings and fare aggregation; the 2010s brought personalization through machine learning on customer data. The current phase, driven by advances in natural language processing, emphasizes conversational planning, instant scenario generation (e.g., multi-stop routes), and real-time logistics coordination for events, flights, and ground transfers.

Milestones

  • 2000s: Fare aggregators and early meta-search engines centralize price discovery.
  • 2010s: Personalization engines optimize offers across user profiles and historical data.
  • 2020s: Conversational AI and LLMs enable itinerary drafts, quick Q&A, and automated agent support.

Outlook and practical forecast for tourism and related marine sectors

AI adoption is likely to grow incrementally as travelers prioritize credibility and local knowledge. For destination logistics and marine-related services—marinas, charter operators, and coastal hospitality—AI can streamline tasks such as berth reservations, weather-informed route suggestions, crew scheduling, and multi-modal transfers that combine flights with transfers to marinas or lakeside docks. However, the human role remains central for safety-critical decisions, captain judgment, and nuanced local regulations affecting sea, gulf, and coastal operations.

Operational implications for marinas and charters

Operators in boating and yachting can pilot AI to improve customer-facing discovery (better SEO and FAQ responses), automate confirmations, and deliver localized recommendations (best anchorages, fishing spots, fuel docks). Yet adoption should be balanced with clear trust signals—verified reviews, up-to-date notices to mariners, and accessible human support for captain-level decisions.

In short, the 2026 findings suggest AI will accelerate efficiency in search, booking flow, and real-time logistics but will not replace the trust built by human expertise. Stakeholders from destination marketing to hotel and marina operations should focus on integrating AI where it reduces friction—scheduling, navigation and updates—while maintaining strong credibility through authoritative content and local expertise.

GetBoat.de is always keeping an eye on the latest tourism news. The main takeaways: organic search and credible content remain primary discovery tools, AI is a growing complementary channel for itinerary and operational logistics, and human oversight continues to govern safety and nuanced local decisions—factors that matter across yacht and boat-friendly Destinations, marinas, beaches, and broader tourism activities such as sailing, fishing and boating.