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Fall is the new summer

  • Automatic
  • 12 September 2025
  • 1 minute read
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This article was written by Hospitality Today. Click here to read the original article

Why travelers are skipping peak crowds and making autumn the hottest season in travel

Sep 12, 2025

For years, fall was the insider’s hack: fewer people, lower prices, a quieter kind of magic. Not anymore. Thanks to remote work, climate change, and a backlash against summer overtourism, autumn has stepped out of the shadows. From the Amalfi Coast to Aspen, what used to be the “shoulder season” is now prime time — and often priced like it.

Key takeaways

  • From secret to mainstream: Destinations like Dublin, Newport, and Cape Cod are packed in September and October, rivaling summer demand.
  • Work-from-anywhere shift: Post-pandemic flexibility means travelers no longer plan strictly around school holidays or office calendars.
  • Goodbye discounts: Fall deals are vanishing fast, with rates at hotels, cruises, and flights now matching — or beating — summer highs.
  • Climate is the driver: Longer warm seasons in Europe and North America are making September and October feel like extensions of July.
  • Overtourism pushback: Crowded summers in Venice, Dubrovnik, and Spain are nudging travelers to delay trips until fall.
  • Fall has its own flavor: Harvest festivals, salmon runs, foliage tours, and wellness retreats are fueling a year-round travel economy.

Get the full story at The New York Times (subscription required)

Navigating Low Demand: 7 Strategies to Capture Market Share Without Reducing Rates
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Navigating Low Demand: 7 Strategies to Capture Market Share Without Reducing Rates

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