Virtuoso disclosed at its 2026 U.S. Forum that member advisors booked 35% more high-end trips in the past year, with per-person bookings above $50,000 shifting from occasional outliers to routine transactions across its global network. The consortium, which connects 1,200 agencies managing approximately $36 billion in annual luxury travel spend, reported 21% U.S. sales growth for the period, the sharpest year-over-year increase since pre-pandemic 2019.
The data arrives as family offices and private-banking travel desks consolidate relationships with fewer, more specialized advisors. Virtuoso's numbers suggest ultra-high-net-worth clients are booking less frequently but spending materially more per trip, a pattern consistent with the shift toward multi-week itineraries combining bucket-list destinations with exclusive-access programming. The $50,000 threshold—historically reserved for around-the-world journeys or African safaris with private jet transfers—now applies to single-destination stays lasting ten to fourteen days, according to network executives speaking at the forum.
Three factors explain the surge. First, luxury hotel operators raised average daily rates 18-22% across flagship properties since 2023, compressing the perceived value gap between five-star and ultra-luxury tiers. Second, post-pandemic travel behavior favored longer, more immersive trips over frequent short breaks, a trend Virtuoso advisors say persists even as Covid restrictions vanish from memory. Third, wealth creation in private equity, technology exits, and real estate liquidity events delivered new clients to advisors who previously served only inherited wealth. These buyers enter the luxury market with different expectations around customization and are willing to pay materially more for advisors who can deliver proprietary access.
The 21% sales growth figure matters beyond Virtuoso's own performance. The network's advisors typically serve clients with liquid net worth above $10 million, making their aggregate booking behavior a proxy for broader high-net-worth consumer confidence. Year-over-year growth at this scale, particularly when accompanied by higher average transaction values, signals that wealth-effect dynamics remain strong despite equity-market volatility and tightening credit conditions in other segments. Luxury hospitality operators, private aviation providers, and yacht-charter companies should treat this data as confirmation that the high end remains structurally decoupled from mass-market travel slowdowns.
Virtuoso also reported a bullish hiring outlook among member agencies, with 68% planning to add advisors in the next twelve months. That figure, released at the forum without detailed breakdowns, suggests agencies believe the 35% booking increase represents structural demand rather than a temporary spike. Hiring at this pace typically precedes physical expansion, with agencies opening satellite offices or securing partnerships with private banks and multi-family offices to access their client rosters.
Operators should watch for three follow-on developments. First, whether Virtuoso's hotel and cruise partners adjust commission structures before the September wave season, when many ultra-high-net-worth clients book winter and spring 2027 travel. Second, if competing networks like Signature Travel or Travel Leaders Group report similar growth when they release annual figures over the next sixty days. Third, whether luxury brands accelerate new-property openings scheduled for 2027-2028, given that occupancy and rate data now support more aggressive development timelines.
Virtuoso's disclosure also creates pricing pressure on independent advisors outside established networks, who lack access to preferred rates and exclusive inventory that justify $50,000 per-person spend levels. Expect further consolidation among smaller agencies seeking network affiliation to remain competitive as client expectations around value-added service continue to rise.