62% report having taken a vacation away from home in past year
Down from the 70% who said they took a vacation in 2001
Income, employment status related to vacation taking
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Sixty-two percent of Americans reported taking a vacation
away from home in the past year, lower than what Gallup measured in 2001
but similar to what was recorded in 2005.
U.S. Adults Who Took a Vacation Away From Home in Past Year, by Employment Status
In the past year, have you taken a vacation away from home or not?
National adults
Employed
Not employed
% Yes
% Yes
% Yes
2017 Dec 4-11
62
69
55
2005 Dec 5-8
64
71
53
2001 Dec 6-9
70
74
64
Gallup
Gallup first asked Americans about their past year's travels using
this question format in 2001, when seven in 10 reported having taken a
vacation that year. When the question was next asked, in 2005, the figures
were similar to what they are today.
Separately, about one in five Americans (21%) report having traveled internationally
over the past year, a figure that has been stable compared with the 19%
recorded in the prior two polls.
The latest figures are from a Dec. 4-11 Gallup poll, which also asked about
Americans' intentions to take vacation time over the holidays. In
contrast to the decline in the percentage of Americans who say they took
a vacation in the past year, Americans were more likely this past December
than in 2000 to say they planned to
take vacation time over the holidays. The dissimilar trends may be due to the difference in question wording
-- with one question asking Americans about their future vacation plans
and the other asking them to report on their past vacations. It is also
possible that holiday vacationing may have become more common even while
people are vacationing less overall.
Employment status is a major factor in Americans' vacation habits.
Nearly seven in 10 employed Americans (69%) reported having taken a vacation,
while slightly more than half of those who are not employed (55%) reported
having taken such trips. The percentage of employed adults who took a
vacation in the past year is down slightly from the 74% recorded in 2001.
Additionally, the U.S. employment-population ratios is about is lower
than it was in 2001, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
The decline in vacation-taking since 2001 recorded by Gallup aligns with
research conducted by Oxford Economics, which found a sharp decline since
2000 in the average number of vacation days American workers were taking
each year. The study has, however, found a slight uptick in vacation days
taken between 2014 and 2016, so the trend could be changing course if
this continues.
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Income, Education, Marital Status and Age Also Factor In Travel
Taking a vacation is clearly related to Americans'
socioeconomic status. More than four in five adults with annual household incomes of $75,000
or more say they took a vacation away from home over the past year (82%)
-- a much greater percentage than Americans in the lower two income brackets
took. Among Americans whose household income was less than $30,000, slightly
more than a third (37%) reported having taken a vacation.
Four in five Americans who have college degrees reported having taken a
vacation in the past year, compared with slightly more than half of those
who are not college graduates (54%).
Americans Who Took a Vacation Away From Home in 2017, by Group
In the past year, have you taken a vacation away from home or not?
% Yes
% No
National adults
62
38
$75,000+
82
18
$30,000-$74,999
57
43
Less than $30,000
37
63
College graduate
80
20
Not a college graduate
54
46
Married
70
30
Unmarried
54
46
Has children under 18
65
35
Does not have children under 18
60
40
18-29
65
35
30-49
65
35
50-64
61
39
65+
51
49
Gallup, Dec. 4-11, 2017
There is also a marked difference in vacation habits by marital status:
while seven in 10 married adults (70%) took a vacation this past year,
only 54% of unmarried adults did the same. Americans with children under
18 (65%) were slightly more likely than those without children under 18
(60%) to report having taken a vacation.
Bottom Line
Though U.S. spending and sentiments about the economy improved in 2017,
that didn't translate into more Americans taking vacations than in
the past. This trend could be cause for concern given that Gallup has
previously noted that Americans who take time for regular trips or vacations
with family and friends have significantly greater well-being than those
who do not - and the difference exists across all income groups. Additionally,
Gallup has found that engaged employees report having taken slightly more
vacation time in the past year than employees who are not engaged or who
are actively disengaged.
The decline in vacation taking is in part due to the decrease in the percentage
of Americans who are employed -- a group that is more likely to take trips
away from home -- but vacation taking has waned among both employed and
unemployed subgroups since 2001.
Some researchers detect a change in the trend of declining vacation time.
This could be related to more options to work remotely during vacation,
which, for many, allows them more vacation time overall.
About three in 10 U.S. workers report having not taken a vacation away
from home in the past year. Employers might do well to examine how to
encourage vacation time in a way that benefits their workforce's engagement
as well as their employees' overall well-being, including such radical
policies as having
no vacation policies at all.
Survey Methods
Results for this Gallup poll are based on telephone interviews conducted
Dec. 4-11, 2017, with a random sample of 1,049 adults, aged 18 and older,
living in all 50 U.S. states and the District of Columbia. For results
based on the total sample of national adults, the margin of sampling error
is ±4 percentage points at the 95% confidence level. All reported
margins of sampling error include computed design effects for weighting.
Each sample of national adults includes a minimum quota of 70% cellphone
respondents and 30% landline respondents, with additional minimum quotas
by time zone within region. Landline and cellular telephone numbers are
selected using random-digit-dial methods.