The travel sector was undoubtedly one of the hardest hit industries during the course of the COVID-19 pandemic. As the world effectively shut down, and travel was available only under the most stringent of conditions, accommodation providers, online travel agencies (OTAs) and airlines all suffered greatly.The travel industry is now, at least, on the road to recovery. Skift Research’s Global Travel Index charts the relative health of the industry against 2019 levels. From a low of just 20% in April 2020, the industry as a whole is now at 85% — only 15 percentage points behind 2019. Some sectors — including vacation rentals — have capitalised on this generational shift in buyer behaviour and actually find themselves in an even stronger position than before.But even with a steady and robust recovery, there are still challenges, largely because of changing traveller expectations. One area particularly impacted by customer demand is the payment experience, and 90% of customers now see payments as important to their overall travel experience.For too long, both providers and customers have had to put up with payments that aren’t fit for purpose, and the pandemic simply highlighted these shortcomings. We’re at a crossroads of customer demand, industry imperative and technological capability. 2023 is the perfect time to stop seeing payments as a back-end function and start looking at them as a lever for growth.In this article, we look at the five biggest payment challenges facing the travel industry, as well as the potential way forward for travel providers:
The 5 biggest payment challenges facing the travel industry in 2023
From better refund experiences to costly failed payments, we look ahead to the biggest payment challenges travel brands need to tackle in the coming year.








