Skift Take

The British millennials value traditional travel agents more than American millennials, but still a large majority have moved away from it, which shows in the number of shuttered high street travel agent store fronts over the last decade or so.

thomOver this year, we are doing a series of consumer surveys at regular intervals that probe various travel habits and nuances of millennials.

Third in this Travel Habits of Millennials 2015 series is a question we asked in the first survey, but aimed this time at the millennials in the UK: “Have you used a travel agent to book a leisure trip in the last 12 months?”

This question was posed to about 750+ British millennials earlier this month, using Google Consumer Surveys.

The topline answer, in keeping with the still relatively-larger popularity of packaged travel and travel agents in UK: Almost 20 percent of millennials said yes, they had used a traditional travel agent in the last year.

Another 10 percent said they did so prior to that last year’s window. A full 70+ percent of British millennials haven’t used a travel agent at all while booking their travels.

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This is almost double the use-ratio of American millennials, which stands at about 10 percent in the last year, according to our survey results last month.

Digging a bit deeper in the demographics of our survey:

  • Along the male-female divide, slightly more British female millennials have not used travel agents at all, 75 percent, compared to about 69 percent of males.
  • Interestingly, similar to the American data, the younger millennials (18-24 year olds) have used travel agents more in the last 12 months than the older 25-34 year old millennials in UK: 20.6 percent vs. 15.4 percent.
  • As for the regions within UK, the Welsh millennials are the least likely to use travel agents compared to England, Northern Ireland, and Scotland.
  • North Ireland millennials are much more likely to use traditional travel agents than other parts of UK, our survey data shows.

Important: This online survey — not served to Skift users — was administered to about 750+ members of the U.K. adult internet population, in the age range 18-34, in the first week of April 2015, through Google Consumer Surveys. The methodology is explained here.

 

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Tags: millennials, thom, uk

Photo credit: British millennials see a larger role for travel agents as part of their travel plans.

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