Knight Frank's latest wealth advisory indicates ultra-high-net-worth individuals are redirecting capital away from outright asset purchases toward experiential spending and fractional ownership structures. The shift marks a measurable break from the accumulation-driven allocation patterns that defined the past decade.
The consultancy's pre-report analysis, released ahead of its formal wealth study, shows UHNW clients favoring structured access models—fractional jet programs, private yacht syndicates, destination club memberships—over traditional fee-simple purchases. The pattern holds across real estate, mobility assets, and hospitality access. Knight Frank's wealth management division tracks approximately $2.1 trillion in assets under advisement globally, giving the firm direct visibility into allocation behavior among families holding $30 million or more in liquid net worth.
Three forces converge. First, the denominator effect: private equity and venture allocations locked up during 2022-2023 have compressed liquidity ratios, making expensive depreciating assets less attractive. Second, operational friction: UHNW families increasingly view full ownership of seldom-used assets—third homes, aircraft, superyachts—as allocation inefficiency when fractional models deliver 85-90% of utility at 30-40% of capital cost. Third, the experience economy's maturation: luxury hospitality brands now offer structured access products that integrate lodging, dining, and concierge services under single membership umbrellas, effectively competing with second-home ownership.
The implications for operators are immediate. Fractional programs that once served as marketing novelties now represent genuine revenue lines. Sentient Jet reported 22% year-over-year growth in jet-card sales during 2025. Exclusive Resorts, a destination club managing properties in 40 markets, added 180 new member families in the same period. These are not distressed buyers priced out of ownership—median member net worth sits above $50 million. They are allocators choosing liquidity preservation over trophy assets.
Luxury hospitality developers face recalibration. Properties designed around whole-ownership or traditional nightly rental now compete with hybrid models—branded residences offering guaranteed occupancy plus managed rental income, effectively creating fractional returns without formal fractional structures. Ritz-Carlton Residences has shifted 60% of its pipeline toward this format since 2023. Four Seasons Private Residences follows similar trajectory, embedding revenue-share mechanisms into purchase agreements for units above $5 million.
Advertising and agency strategists should watch three indicators. First, membership-model marketing budgets: expect increased spend from fractional operators and destination clubs targeting wealth-management channels and family-office conferences through mid-2026. Second, repositioning among traditional luxury brands: watch for Swiss watchmakers, Italian fashion houses, and German automotive marques to pilot access-based product lines—subscription services, rotating collections, guaranteed buyback programs—testing whether their audiences mirror the broader UHNW pivot. Third, real estate marketing's structural shift: developers will increasingly sell yield and access narratives rather than pride-of-ownership, requiring creative executions that balance aspiration with financial pragmatism.
Knight Frank's full wealth report arrives in Q2 2026, expected to quantify allocation percentages and break down experiential spending by category. Early signals suggest traditional luxury-goods purchases—watches, jewelry, art—remain stable, while big-ticket physical assets face sustained headwinds. The pattern resembles corporate balance-sheet optimization more than lifestyle downgrade.
The wealth management consultancy operates 488 offices across 57 countries, with particular density in London, Hong Kong, and New York—markets where UHNW concentration allows real-time behavioral tracking. Its annual wealth reports have guided private bank strategy and luxury brand positioning since 2012, making preliminary signals worth institutional attention.
Families worth $100 million or more now hold an average of 2.3 fractional or membership-based access products, up from 1.1 in 2022. That doubling occurred without corresponding reduction in primary residence value or core investment portfolios, indicating reallocation from secondary assets rather than distress. The velocity matters: this is substitution, not supplement.