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Bleisure & remote work are reshaping travel patterns

Remote and hybrid work were already growing pre-pandemic. Now, several years in, the patterns have settled — and they have produced a traveller profile that looks meaningfully different from the classic seven-night summer holidaymaker.

22 Apr 2026 4 min read Category: Travel

What 'bleisure' actually looks like now

The classic definition — adding leisure days to a business trip — has broadened. The bigger shift is independent professionals and remote employees taking 10- to 21-day stays in destinations they would previously have visited for a week. They work mornings, explore afternoons, and book outside school holidays.

For destinations, this audience has high lifetime value (they often return), prefers off-peak weeks (which destinations need to fill), and responds well to messaging around quality of life, local immersion and practical things like wifi quality and quiet workspace.

Implications for destination marketing

First, expand the season story. A destination that used to advertise 'July & August' now has a real audience for 'May, June, September' with bleisure-tailored content.

Second, infrastructure storytelling matters. A photo of a calm co-working café with mountain views does more for this audience than any tourism-board sunset shot. Wifi, quiet, local food, longer-stay discounts — these are now legitimate marketing assets.

“A remote worker on a 14-day stay is worth meaningfully more to a destination than a 7-day high-season tourist — and is far easier to attract off-peak.”
Takeaway Remote work has produced a real, growing audience for off-peak travel. The destinations that explicitly market to it are pulling ahead.
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