A stranger catches your eye at the hotel bar. You talk for hours. By the end of the week, you exchange numbers and promise to stay in touch. Then you fly home, and reality sets in. The question hangs there: can this actually become something real?
The data says yes, more often than you might expect.
What the Numbers Show
A survey from MEININGER Hotels and research firm Appinio, conducted in January 2025, found that 26.2% of respondents had fallen in love while on vacation. Of those, 24.8% described that person as the love of their life. The survey also reported that 16.4% of vacation romances turned into long-term relationships. Another 45.8% remained shorter flings.
Separate research from OnePoll and Adventure Travel News puts the figure higher for Americans. According to that survey, 23% of Americans met their spouse on a trip. A third reported a vacation romance of some kind. Three in 10 have dated someone they met on a plane.
These numbers suggest that vacation dating produces real outcomes for a meaningful portion of travelers.
Why Vacation Romance Feels Different
Nearly 40% of respondents in the MEININGER study said falling in love was easier while traveling. The reasons they gave were practical: a relaxed atmosphere, openness to new encounters, and proximity to people with similar interests.
The timeline supports this. According to the same research, 71.8% felt chemistry within a few days. Another 20.6% met their vacation love immediately upon arrival, on the airplane or train. This quick connection makes sense when you consider that vacation removes the usual buffers of routine and obligation.
Relationship Preferences
Some travelers arrive at their destination with specific types of connections in mind. A person might seek casual flings, others might want long-term partners, and some look for sugar daddies or unconventional arrangements that suit their lifestyle. The 2024 Dating.com survey found that 44% of single women and 54% of single men were open to dating someone new during summer vacations, which suggests travelers often arrive with clear intentions about what they want.
Dating apps support this specificity. Tinder’s Passport feature saw 145,000 daily uses on average last year, with American users mostly searching in Mexico, Canada, and Colombia. Bumble’s Travel Mode lets premium members adjust their location before arrival. These tools allow people to filter for the kind of relationship they actually want before they land.
Location Matters
If you want to meet someone on vacation, beaches appear to be your best odds. The MEININGER research found that 46.2% of respondents who fell in love while traveling met their partner during a beach holiday. More than a quarter (25.6%) met in public areas of their accommodation, including breakfast rooms, lounges, and common spaces.
This suggests that destinations encouraging relaxation and social mingling produce more romantic connections than isolated or activity-heavy trips.
Younger Travelers Are More Open
A 2024 Priceline survey of 3,000 Americans found that Gen Z respondents were twice as likely as average to express interest in a vacation romance. They were also three times as likely to view travel as a replacement for dating apps.
The Dating.com survey from the same year showed that nearly a third of Americans felt their local dating pool was too homogenous. They wanted to connect with people from other places and backgrounds. This openness to outside connection fuels travel dating behavior.
Apps Built for Travel Dating
Bumble has over 50 million monthly active users across more than 150 countries. The platform has facilitated over 20,000 marriages since 2014. Its Travel Mode feature lets users set their location before arriving somewhere new, making it easy to start conversations in advance.
Tinder’s Passport feature is especially popular in the Asia-Pacific region, where 78% of young singles want to make connections before traveling. India saw a 25% increase in Passport use, the highest of any region.
Niche apps have also emerged. TourBar has over 3.5 million users and thousands of trips listed in the United States, Europe, and Asia. Fairytrail caters to remote workers, with 93% of its users identifying as remote or aspiring to be. Unlike most dating apps, 60% of Fairytrail’s user base is female.
Can It Last Once You’re Home?
The challenge with vacation romance is sustaining it. A March 2025 survey from Talker Research, commissioned by BeachBound, found that romantic feelings fade roughly a week after returning home. The average was 6.5 days. Women reported the spark fading faster than men, at 5.6 days compared to 7.9 days.
This dip is predictable. Travel removes stress and responsibility. Returning home reintroduces both.
Long-Distance Relationships After Vacation
For those willing to try a long-distance relationship, the statistics are encouraging. Research indicates that 60% of couples who begin a long-distance relationship make it work over the long term. An additional 81% of people in long-distance relationships report higher intimacy when they finally reunite.
Dating coach Julie Spira advises singles to expand their search by changing their zip codes. She asks: would you board a plane to meet someone if you knew they might be the right person? According to a Plenty of Fish poll of over 1,500 singles, more than 70% said they would be open to going on a date while traveling.
The Market for Romance Travel
The romance travel industry is growing fast. Global Growth Insights valued the market at $1.83 billion in 2024. It is projected to reach $2.28 billion in 2025 and $12.91 billion by 2033, reflecting a compound annual growth rate of 24.2%. LOVU Romance Travel reported growth of 11.1% annually through 2028.
More than 90% of couples are maintaining or increasing their travel budgets compared to 2024. Environmental factors also influence decisions, with 81% of travelers preferring green accommodations and 54% considering carbon emissions when booking.
Existing Couples Benefit Too
Travel supports couples who are already together. Research shows that 82% of married Americans believe travel can rekindle their relationship. Around 57% feel more connected while traveling, and 60% report greater affection on trips. Seventy-three percent view travel as a relationship test, with success depending on shared planning and adaptability.
The Honest Answer
Lasting relationships can form on vacation. The data confirms it. Roughly a quarter of vacation romances turn into long-term partnerships. Apps make it easier to find someone before you arrive. Beaches and social accommodations improve your odds. And if you do start something, long-distance relationships succeed more often than not.
The caveat is that post-vacation reality does set in. The feelings will soften once you return to routine. Making it last requires effort beyond the trip itself.


