Consumers have long associated travel with their personal wellness. Many people look forward to their vacation trips as an opportunity to rejuvenate and de-stress, and to enrich themselves by immersing in new cultures, sites, and experiences. Not surprisingly, “take a vacation” was among the top five things consumers do to maintain and enhance their wellness, according to the Spas and the Global Wellness Market report conducted by SRI International in 2010 (see 2011 Spa Business Handbook p78). Some travellers take trips specifically to maintain and improve their health. Others want to keep up with their healthy habits when they travel. This growing trend is giving rise to wellness tourism on a global scale. Wellness tourism is positioned at a profitable intersection between two massive and growing industries – wellness and tourism – estimated at US$2 trillion (€1.5tn, £1.2tn) and US$3.2 trillion (€2.3tn, £2tn) respectively. Exactly what is wellness tourism, and how large is this market? This was the subject of the SRI research report The Global Wellness Tourism Economy, commissioned by the Global Spa and Wellness Summit that was revealed at its annual conference in New Delhi on 5 October this year (see p70). Wellness travellers In contrast to the medical paradigm, wellness tourism is proactive, focusing on personal responsibility and initiative to integrate a variety of healthy habits, activities and practices that bring an individual to an increasingly optimal state of wellbeing. At the core of wellness travel are the multidimensional values related to wellness, which extend from the physical and emotional, to the social and environmental. Motivated by these values, a wellness traveller may take part in many different kinds of activities during travel. These activities and businesses make up the diverse wellness tourism economy. They include spas, health resorts, baths and springs, as well as yoga retreats, national parks, gyms and fitness centres, specialty restaurants, and complementary and alternative medicine centres. Based on this framework, we define wellness tourism as “travel associated with the pursuit of maintaining or enhancing one’s personal wellbeing”. Domestic dominance We identified two types of wellness travellers in our research – primary purpose and secondary purpose. For the primary purpose wellness traveller, wellness is the sole purpose for the trip and for choosing the destination. Examples are those who stay at a destination spa or wellness resort such as Kamalaya in Koh Samui, enroll in a yoga or meditation retreat, or travel to experience authentic ayurveda medicine. What surprised us, however, is that secondary purpose wellness travellers make up a much larger proportion – accounting for 85 per cent of all wellness trips and expenditures . These travellers have an interest in maintaining wellness during travel, although it’s not the sole purpose for taking a trip. Examples would be a tourist visiting India mainly with a cultural interest, but who also visits an ayurveda centre, or takes a yoga class. It could be the business traveller who chooses to stay at a hotel that offers healthy food and has a good gym, or a person who visits a spa during a ski vacation. Another very interesting finding is that while many people think of tourism as travel to a different country, in reality much of the world’s tourism takes place within a country’s borders. This is especially true in large countries, such as the US, Canada, Russia, India, and China. We estimate that domestic tourism accounts for roughly two-thirds of the global wellness tourism market, similar to the distribution in the global tourism market. What’s it worth? Measuring the size of an industry is a challenging task and we based our methodology on estimating the number of wellness tourists by country, and aggregating their expenditures (see p82). In total, we estimate that the wellness tourism economy is worth US$439bn (€318.8bn, £272.8bn), roughly 14 per cent of global tourism expenditures. Wellness tourism directly creates 12 million jobs around the world and has a total economic impact of US$1.3tn (€962bn, £809bn), when multiplied economic impacts are included. Not surprisingly, wellness tourism is a rather large segment, similar in size to ecotourism and culinary tourism, but bigger than sports tourism and medical tourism. Importantly, however, these niche markets do not operate exclusively of one another – a wellness tourist can be simultaneously an eco-tourist, a cultural tourist and a sports tourist. And we see that there many opportunities to cross-market niche tourism products to these potential customers. The 525 million trips made by wellness travellers represent only 6 per cent of all tourism trips, but account for 14 per cent of all tourism spending. Wellness travellers spend more per trip on average as they tend to be wealthier and more educated. While an international tourist on average spends US$1,000 (€726, £621) per trip (exclusive of air travel), an international wellness tourist spends 65 per cent more. The differential between an average domestic traveller and a wellness traveller is even greater, with domestic wellness traveller spending 2.5 times the average domestic tourist per trip. Spa tourism The spa industry is obviously a very important and core player in wellness tourism. We define spa tourism as an overnight trip in which the person’s motivation for the trip includes the enjoyment of spa services or treatments (as either a primary or secondary purpose); and it accounts for approximately 225 million annual trips. Spa tourism, estimated at US$180bn (€130.7bn, £111.8bn), represents about 41 per cent of the global wellness tourism market – the largest sub sector within wellness tourism. As wellness tourism is high-yield, and can potentially bring additional social benefits to the community such as preservation and support for local products, environment, culture and traditions, the spa industry may find many allies and partners with other key stakeholders – such as those in the hospitality, health and tourism sectors, as well as government ministries – to explore new business opportunities and models in this high growth market. We predict that it will grow by 9.7 per cent a year and that it will reach US$285bn (€211bn, £177bn) by 2017. Global growth Wellness tourism is very concentrated in the top destination countries, with the top 20 accounting for 88 per cent of the global wellness tourism market. These are primarily concentrated in North America, Western Europe, and the high-income Asian countries. The top five countries alone represent 63 per cent of the global market. Wellness tourism will grow rapidly in the coming years, at a much higher rate than the overall tourism market. We estimate that wellness tourism trips will grow at an annual rate of 9.1 per cent through 2017 (compared to a 6.2 per cent global tourism annual growth forecast), bringing wellness tourism up to 16 per cent of global tourism expenditures. More than half of the growth will take place in Asia, Latin America and Middle East and North Africa, fuelled by a rise in both domestic wellness tourism and intra-regional wellness tourism (see Table 1). In the more established markets of North America and Europe, wellness tourism growth will be driven by ageing populations and their increasing concern with preventive health measures. In addition, the maturing of Gen X and Gen Y consumer cohorts – who are more self-aware, globally conscious, and open to new experiences – are also likely to boost wellness travel.
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