Get global findings about people's desire to travel, comfort levels and support of vaccine passports.
We asked about the desire to travel, comfort levels and amount of support around vaccine passports. Find global key answers here.
Half of all respondents globally are looking to return to travelling as much as they were pre-pandemic after their local vaccination rollouts have been completed. A quarter predict they will travel less.
Singapore (34%), India (30%) and the UK (30%) are the most likely to reduce their travel even after their local vaccination rollouts complete.
Nineteen percent (19%) of respondents in the US and Mainland China report to be travelling as much as they were before the pandemic.
Globally, 23% of travellers interviewed would feel comfortable travelling again once everyone in their country has had the opportunity to be vaccinated.
Twenty percent (20%) of respondents report that they would feel comfortable travelling once their local government approves travel for their citizens. The same amount hasn’t yet thought about it.
Comfort lies in different places for different countries. Forty percent (40%) of Brazilian respondents report government approval as where they would feel comfortable to commence travel again. It was also the highest-ranking sentiment for German respondents but at a lower 27%.
Thirty-four percent (34%) of US respondents report they are comfortable travelling now, with or without being vaccinated.
Government approval is most important for France (27%), India (26%), China (26%) and Singapore (26%). In Singapore and the UK, 26% report that they have yet to think about it yet.
Globally, 70% of respondents support a vaccine passport - documentation to prove that a person has received a Coronavirus vaccine – for international travel this year.
Eight out of 10 respondents in India, China and Brazil are in support and 7 out of 10 in Singapore and the UK.
Respondents in the US and Germany are most opposed to the Vaccine Passport idea at almost a third.