This is the state of travel funding in 2023

A preview of Phocuswright's State of Travel Funding 2023 report.

Phocuswright has tracked the digital travel startup landscape for around 15 years, and as of the time of publishing this report there are over 4,600 companies in our Travel Startups Interactive Database (available to Phocuswright research subscribers). All of the data in this report, and more, is accessible in the online database. 

During the past decade and a half, from the Great Recession to the rise of mobile devices, social media and the sharing economy, then through the COVID-19 pandemic, travel companies have felt the heights of funding frenzies and the depths of disappearing demand. 

The industry experienced a funding boom during the low interest rate environment of 2021, particularly for companies that could demonstrate resilience and relevance during the COVID crisis. But for multiple reasons, foremost being the rapid rise of interest rates, investment activity has dried up rapidly over the past two years.  

Leveraging data from Phocuswright’s proprietary database of companies as well as desk research and interviews, The State of Travel Funding report presents a broad look at funding to travel companies in today’s challenging environment. 

This article is a preview of Phocuswright's full report The State of Travel Funding 2023.
Get the full report here.

The State of Travel Funding 2023 includes the following sections:

  • Introduction
  • Funding Analysis
  • Regional Analysis
  • Investor Analysis
  • Business Focus Analysis
  • Vertical Analysis
  • Horizontal Analysis
  • Interest-ing Times for Travel Companies

Methodology
This report features analysis of travel companies founded at any time in the past three decades, but primarily focuses on funding rounds raised by these companies in the past decade – specifically between the beginning of 2013 and the first half of 2023 (1H23). 

Changes to the Methodology: 
*Previous iterations of this report, titled The State of Travel Startups, analyzed startups founded within a certain date range (e.g., the past five or 10 years). This year, given the challenging funding environment, and the fact that well-established companies have been among the main entities raising money, we expanded the date range to include companies founded at any time in the past three decades. Consequently, we renamed the report as The State of Travel Funding.  

In order to avoid skewing the analysis, companies which have raised over $4 billion or only operate tangentially in travel (specifically, autonomous vehicle companies) were excluded from the dataset unless otherwise specified. This equates to 32 companies (e.g., Uber, Didi, Airbnb) that have raised $116.2 billion being excluded from the analyzed dataset. 

**Funding includes publicly disclosed amounts of venture capital, private equity, crowdfunding, debt and other types of traditional funding rounds. Dollar amounts associated with IPOs, post-IPO investments, acquisitions and mergers were excluded from the analyzed dataset. 

Funding Analysis

After previously peaking in 2018 at $11.8 billion, travel company funding declined to $7.4 billion by 2020 as the world ground to a halt (see Figure 1). However, funding exploded to new heights in 2021. In 2022, funding nearly matched the earlier high of $11.7 billion. 

The record-setting level of funding in 2021, which carried into 2022, was primarily driven by the fact that money was cheap, with effectively 0% interest rates for most of 2020, all of 2021 and part of 2022. This pushed investors further out on the risk curve as they were incentivized to search for yield in riskier investments such as startups. 

But in 2023, funding is trending to be down dramatically. If funding were to keep the same pace through the rest of the year, it would result in the lowest level of investment dollars raised since 2014. 

Further, the number of funding rounds in 1Q and 2Q 2023 dropped to under 100 each. At this rate, the year would close with the lowest number of rounds in more than a decade.  

The second quarter of 2023 began to show a recovery in dollars invested. But it’s anyone’s guess if this recovery will be sustained the rest of the year and into 2024, given ongoing uncertainties about interest rates, bank stability, inflation, recession and geopolitical events. 

This article is a preview of Phocuswright's full report The State of Travel Funding 2023. Get the full report here.

The full report includes the following sections:

  • Introduction
  • Funding Analysis
  • Regional Analysis
  • Investor Analysis
  • Business Focus Analysis
  • Vertical Analysis
  • Horizontal Analysis
  • Interest-ing Times for Travel Companies

Watch a presentation of the research from The Phocuswright Conference 2023

Mike Coletta, manager, research and innovation, Phocuswright

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