The New Cost of a Friendly Face
One of the biggest drivers of high vacation costs has little to do with the number of people on the beach and everything to do with the person checking you into your hotel. The U.S. hospitality industry is still grappling with a significant labor shortage.
From airline pilots and baggage handlers to housekeepers and line cooks, businesses are paying more to attract and retain staff. These aren't just marginal increases; they are substantial wage hikes needed to compete for workers in a tight labor market. That higher payroll cost doesn't just disappear. It’s baked directly into the price you pay for your hotel room, your rental car, and your dinner. When a resort has to pay 20% more for its entire staff than it did a few years ago, that cost is passed directly to the handful of guests staying there, making your seemingly quiet getaway feel surprisingly pricey.
Demand Hasn’t Disappeared, It's Different
While the chaotic “revenge travel” wave of the immediate post-pandemic years may have crested, consumer demand for travel remains incredibly robust. What’s changed is the nature of that demand. Americans are still prioritizing experiences over goods, and they've shown a willingness to pay a premium for them. So, while a popular destination might not be packed to the gills in early June, the travelers who are there may be spending more. They're booking the suite instead of the standard room, opting for the guided tour, or staying for a full week instead of a long weekend. Travel providers have noticed. They no longer feel the pressure to slash prices to fill every last room or seat. They can maintain higher prices because they know a committed, high-spending customer base is there, ensuring their revenue targets are met even with slightly fewer people.
Inflation’s Hidden Vacation Tax
Beyond wages, nearly every input required to run a travel-related business has become more expensive. Think of it as a hidden vacation tax levied by inflation. The cost of jet fuel remains a significant factor for airlines, directly impacting ticket prices. For hotels, the price of everything from industrial-sized bottles of shampoo to fresh linens and cleaning supplies has climbed. Restaurants, a cornerstone of any vacation, are navigating soaring food costs for essentials like cooking oil, produce, and proteins. Even the cost to insure a fleet of rental cars or a tour bus has increased. Each of these is a small line item on a business's expense sheet, but when added together, they create a much higher operational cost base that must be covered by customer revenue. You don't see these costs on your bill, but you feel them in the final price.
Is the Shoulder Season Disappearing?
For decades, savvy travelers have used the “shoulder seasons”—the periods just before or after the peak, like May-June and September-October—to find great deals and thinner crowds. However, the rise of remote and flexible work has fundamentally changed that equation. More people can now travel outside the rigid confines of the traditional summer school break. The result? The peak season is stretching. Early June is no longer a sleepy prelude to summer; for many destinations, it's now part of the main event. Airlines and hotels use sophisticated dynamic pricing models that respond to this elongated demand in real-time. If their data shows that flights and rooms are booking up for the second week of June just as quickly as they are for the third week of July, they have no incentive to offer a discount. The secret got out, and the shoulder season bargain is becoming a relic of a bygone era.













