Most travelers used to pick a vacation, then figure out how to pay for it.
This summer, more of them are doing it backwards.
With cash fares running near the top of multi-year ranges, a third of summer travelers say they'll cover at least part of the trip with credit card points or airline miles, per a NerdWallet report.
That's reshaping where they're actually going. The destination is whichever route their balance can cover.
Why this summer is different
Airfare took off early in 2026. The Bureau of Labor Statistics' Consumer Price Index showed fares up more than 6% month over month in January.
Then jet fuel costs jumped on rising tensions in the Middle East. Airlines warned the cost would land on travelers fast.
That's pushed more people to lean on rewards. About 32% of 2026 summer travelers plan to use points or miles to save money. About 84% will use a credit card to pay for at least part of the trip.
The catch: most major U.S. airlines now use dynamic award pricing.
In English: when cash fares spike, points prices spike too. A route that used to cost 50,000 points might cost 100,000 in peak season.
The reward program problem
Loyalty programs aren't easy. About 48% of Americans say they're too complex, per NerdWallet.
The number is even higher for younger flyers. About 56% of Gen Z agree.
That's part of why only a third of summer travelers actually plan to redeem rewards. The other two thirds are paying cash, which usually means a credit card balance that lingers.
About 35% of last summer's travelers who paid with a credit card still haven't paid off the balance. That's a debt load investors should watch in the next round of consumer credit data.
The cost cuts travelers are making
The trade-offs are showing up in other ways too. About 35% of travelers plan to drive instead of fly to save money.
Another 33% are picking lodging based on price over amenities.
Roughly 42% of Americans say they'd rather skip a vacation than book budget travel. That number is higher among younger travelers (50% of Gen Z) than older ones (36% of boomers).
The combined picture: a summer where more people are traveling, but they're spending more carefully and lining up around fewer destinations.
The bigger consumer story
The travel data is one piece of a wider trend. Roughly 45% of Americans plan to take a summer trip that requires a flight or paid lodging, per the same NerdWallet survey.
The total bill is set to top $475 billion. The average traveler plans to spend about $3,940 on the trip.
That kind of spending shows up in the books of every major travel firm. Hotels, airlines, online travel agencies, and credit card issuers all touch some part of it.
What to watch
For investors, the story isn't just about consumer pain. It's about which travel firms are positioned for a points-driven summer.
Airlines with simpler award charts and fewer dynamic-pricing surprises (think Alaska Airlines or partners like Bilt) have been gaining mindshare with frequent travelers.
Banks that issue premium travel cards are still seeing demand for transferable point currencies, like Chase Ultimate Rewards and Amex Membership Rewards. That's the case even as overall card balances climb.
The strongest summer travel signal isn't where people want to go. It's where their points can take them.
