New eDreams Survey Reveals How Far Americans Will Go for Live Sports
- US sports fans lead the world in domestic travel willingness; 37% would sacrifice daily luxuries like streaming and dining out to secure a game-day trip.
The findings highlight a distinct "sports tourism" profile for US consumers, characterizing them as passionate, highly organized early-bird planners who favor domestic travel but aren't afraid to spend the equivalent of a full summer vacation on a premier sporting event.
Key Findings Breakdown
1. Travel Distance Willingness & Global Benchmarks
-
National Travel : 46% of American respondents are willing to travel nationally for a sporting event.- Global Context: The US has the highest percentage of national travel willingness in the world, significantly outpacing the global average (34%) and countries like
Portugal (24%).
- Global Context: The US has the highest percentage of national travel willingness in the world, significantly outpacing the global average (34%) and countries like
-
International Travel : 21% of Americans would travel internationally.- Gender Split: Men are more likely to cross borders for sports, with 26% willing to travel internationally compared to 16% of women.
2.
When asked which sports they would travel furthest to watch live, Americans ranked their top three choices alongside clear generational divides:
- American Football: 57% (Peak demographic: 69% of 55–64 year-olds).
-
The
Olympics : 38% (Peak demographic: 44% of 25–34 year-olds). - Basketball: 35% (Peak demographic: 51% of 18–24 year-olds).
- The Global Soccer Disconnect: Americans are the least interested in soccer/football (25%) compared to the global market, where it ranks first (53%). By comparison, 74% of Portuguese respondents would travel furthest for soccer.
3. Fan Sacrifices: What Americans Give Up for a Ticket
Securing a trip to a major game requires tradeoffs. Americans are highly likely to sacrifice personal comforts, leading global averages in lifestyle cutbacks:
-
Lifestyle Sacrifices (37%): Cutting back on "daily luxuries" (eating out, streaming subscriptions, new clothes).
- Demographic & Global Context: Women (40%) are more likely to cut back than men (34%). This 37% metric is the highest in the world, beating the global average (31%) and drastically outpacing
Germany (18%).
- Demographic & Global Context: Women (40%) are more likely to cut back than men (34%). This 37% metric is the highest in the world, beating the global average (31%) and drastically outpacing
- Financial Sacrifices (19%): Dipping into long-term savings or emergency funds.
-
Professional Sacrifices (14%): Utilizing all remaining annual paid leave for the year.
- Gender Split: Men (18%) are notably more willing to exhaust their vacation time for sports than women (11%).
4. "Sports-Cations": Combining Games with Leisure
Americans prefer to maximize their travel by turning a game into a mini-vacation, opting predominantly for short destination extensions:
-
1–2
Extra Days : 45% of Americans add this to explore. This is the highest percentage globally for this duration, compared to a 39% global average. (Favored by 49% of women vs. 41% of men). -
3–4
Extra Days : 40% of Americans extend by this length. (Favored by 43% of men vs. 36% of women).
5. Booking Styles and "Bucket List" Budgets
The American sports tourist is highly proactive and prepared to spend big on landmark events:
- The "Early Bird" Style (60%): The vast majority of Americans book their travel the exact moment their team or athlete is officially confirmed.
- The "Last Minute Pro" Style (20%): A smaller segment waits for a last minute deal or a secondary market ticket.
- The "Summer Vacation" Budget (53%): More than half of Americans view an ultimate bucket-list sporting event as worth the cost of a full summer vacation (e.g. flights and a high-end hotel).
- The "Staycation" Budget (29%): Nearly a third cap their bucket-list sports spending at the cost of a local experience or quick road trip.
An eDreams spokesperson comments: "Our study confirms that for Americans, live sports are a top travel priority, not just entertainment. US fans are highly proactive 'Early Birds' who will book their trips the exact second their team qualifies, and many are completely willing to sacrifice daily luxuries to cross these bucket-list games off their list.”
*Methodology: Poll conducted by One Poll for
View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260602276133/en/
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