Voice reading · ~6 minWelcome to the Notitur daily brief, your travel-industry recap. Today: Airbus A320 successor by 2035, Baleària buys Armas, and the TikTok traveler arrives. The airline industry is moving in two opposite directions: while Airbus sets a date for the end of an era with the announcement of an A320 replacement, new EU refund rules threaten to break the travel agency business model. Meanwhile, the traveler of the future no longer searches for hotels on Google, they find them on TikTok, and Spanish hotels face a record-breaking summer. All in a day when Baleària consolidates in the Mediterranean and AI still hasn't landed in airline boardrooms.. Today's brief. Airbus sets a date for the end of the A320 era. Airbus CEO Guillaume Faury confirmed that the successor to the best-selling aircraft in history will fly by 2035. He told Aviation Week. The data: the new model will not depend on Boeing's delays with the 737 replacement. The takeaway for airlines planning their fleet for the next decade: they have a calendar. Use it to negotiate or time runs out. Source: Preferente.. Baleària takes full control of Armas Mediterránea. The ferry company has closed the purchase of 100% of Armas Mediterránea, adding ships and routes in the Alborán Sea and the Strait of Gibraltar. Three vessels join the fleet: the JJ Sister, the Almariya, and the Volcán de Timanfaya. The operation, announced in August 2025, has all regulatory approvals from Spain and Morocco. For the sector, this further concentrates the Mediterranean tourism ferry business. Source: Hosteltur.. EU refund rules put travel agencies in a bind. The provisional agreement between the EU Council and the Parliament will require a 100% refund on canceled flights, including agency booking fees. The ECTAA has warned: it turns agencies into the weakest link, forced to refund fees for services already rendered and for disruptions they didn't cause. Anyone selling flights should prepare for a new cost front. Source: Hosteltur.. Hotels. Summer looks strong, but watch out for the guest arriving from TikTok. The Spanish hotel sector faces the second half of 2026 with strong international demand and positive forecasts for occupancy and rates in summer and fall, according to Smart Travel News. The good news: international tourism is pushing hard. The bad news: the incoming customer is increasingly unpredictable. A recent study by TecnoHotel reveals that Generation Z discovers hotels on TikTok before search engines. The problem is not just that viral videos drive decisions, but that post-stay reviews also play out on the same social network. For hotels, this means rethinking their presence on visual platforms and, above all, measuring reputation in the creator ecosystem, not just on OTAs. Source: Smart Travel News and TecnoHotel.. Marriott signs global agreement with Coca-Cola. The chain announced a worldwide agreement with The Coca‑Cola Company to standardize beverage offerings across its entire hotel portfolio. For the summer season, a non-room revenue move that aims to improve guest experience and standardize costs. The takeaway: in peak season, every ancillary service counts as differential income. Source: 10 Minutes News for Hoteliers.. Airlines and travel. When demand shock hit, trust went back to human channels. An analysis by Hospitality.today on the first real demand shock of the agentic era shows that in times of uncertainty, travelers from the US, UK, and Germany prioritized safety over price and convenience. Trust in booking still lives where there's a human on the other end. For airlines and OTAs, this is a warning: automation is fine, but without a human support channel during a crisis, direct booking is lost. Source: Hospitality.today.. Expedia bets on shoppable video with IShowSpeed. After an initial awareness video, Expedia has launched a shoppable format with creator IShowSpeed to turn hype into bookings. This move ties into the trend identified by TecnoHotel: Generation Z buys travel where they discover destinations, on TikTok and creator platforms. The question is whether direct conversion from video can hold up against traditional search. Source: Skift.. AI in travel. AI still hasn't entered airline boardrooms. An analysis by TNMT notes that executives at the 500 largest U.S. companies mention "AI" more often than "earnings" in earnings calls. But airline leaders barely say the word. The irony is that the sector generating the most data (bookings, routes, pricing, weather) is the one integrating the least AI at the top. While hotels are starting to use dynamic pricing with machine learning, airlines are still discussing capacity in Excel. The gap will show. Source: TNMT (Lufthansa Innovation Hub).. What we are watching Airbus A320 replacement: in the coming months, airlines will start positioning with conditional orders. Those who wait until 2030 will pay more. EU flight refund rules: the final legislative process could close before year-end. Travel agencies need to prepare their cost argument now. TikTok as a booking channel: Expedia's bet with IShowSpeed could mark a turning point if conversion holds. We are tracking the return data. Skift Global Forum: just two months until it kicks off in New York. AI in travel and the new traveler profile will be central topics.. As we said yesterday in Verano en línea con 2025 e invierno con impulso aéreo, the sector is in a moment of false calm. Today's news confirms three tensions simmering beneath the surface: EU regulation against agencies, the generational shift in booking behavior, and airlines' slow AI adoption. Those not moving on these three fronts will be playing defense next year. And in summer, that costs money. That is today's recap. Come back tomorrow for more on travel, artificial intelligence and travel tech. See you tomorrow on Notitur.
Airbus A320 successor by 2035, Baleària buys Armas, and the TikTok traveler arrives · notitur.com
The airline industry is moving in two opposite directions: while Airbus sets a date for the end of an era with the announcement of an A320 replacement, new EU refund rules threaten to break the travel agency business model. Meanwhile, the traveler of the future no longer searches for hotels on Google, they find them on TikTok, and Spanish hotels face a record-breaking summer. All in a day when Baleària consolidates in the Mediterranean and AI still hasn't landed in airline boardrooms.
Today's brief
Airbus sets a date for the end of the A320 era. Airbus CEO Guillaume Faury confirmed that the successor to the best-selling aircraft in history will fly by 2035. He told Aviation Week. The data: the new model will not depend on Boeing's delays with the 737 replacement. The takeaway for airlines planning their fleet for the next decade: they have a calendar. Use it to negotiate or time runs out. Source: Preferente.
Baleària takes full control of Armas Mediterránea. The ferry company has closed the purchase of 100% of Armas Mediterránea, adding ships and routes in the Alborán Sea and the Strait of Gibraltar. Three vessels join the fleet: the JJ Sister, the Almariya, and the Volcán de Timanfaya. The operation, announced in August 2025, has all regulatory approvals from Spain and Morocco. For the sector, this further concentrates the Mediterranean tourism ferry business. Source: Hosteltur.
EU refund rules put travel agencies in a bind. The provisional agreement between the EU Council and the Parliament will require a 100% refund on canceled flights, including agency booking fees. The ECTAA has warned: it turns agencies into the weakest link, forced to refund fees for services already rendered and for disruptions they didn't cause. Anyone selling flights should prepare for a new cost front. Source: Hosteltur.
Summer looks strong, but watch out for the guest arriving from TikTok. The Spanish hotel sector faces the second half of 2026 with strong international demand and positive forecasts for occupancy and rates in summer and fall, according to Smart Travel News. The good news: international tourism is pushing hard. The bad news: the incoming customer is increasingly unpredictable. A recent study by TecnoHotel reveals that Generation Z discovers hotels on TikTok before search engines. The problem is not just that viral videos drive decisions, but that post-stay reviews also play out on the same social network. For hotels, this means rethinking their presence on visual platforms and, above all, measuring reputation in the creator ecosystem, not just on OTAs. Source: Smart Travel News and TecnoHotel.
Marriott signs global agreement with Coca-Cola. The chain announced a worldwide agreement with The Coca‑Cola Company to standardize beverage offerings across its entire hotel portfolio. For the summer season, a non-room revenue move that aims to improve guest experience and standardize costs. The takeaway: in peak season, every ancillary service counts as differential income. Source: 10 Minutes News for Hoteliers.
Airlines and travel
When demand shock hit, trust went back to human channels. An analysis by Hospitality.today on the first real demand shock of the agentic era shows that in times of uncertainty, travelers from the US, UK, and Germany prioritized safety over price and convenience. Trust in booking still lives where there's a human on the other end. For airlines and OTAs, this is a warning: automation is fine, but without a human support channel during a crisis, direct booking is lost. Source: Hospitality.today.
Expedia bets on shoppable video with IShowSpeed. After an initial awareness video, Expedia has launched a shoppable format with creator IShowSpeed to turn hype into bookings. This move ties into the trend identified by TecnoHotel: Generation Z buys travel where they discover destinations, on TikTok and creator platforms. The question is whether direct conversion from video can hold up against traditional search. Source: Skift.
AI in travel
AI still hasn't entered airline boardrooms. An analysis by TNMT notes that executives at the 500 largest U.S. companies mention "AI" more often than "earnings" in earnings calls. But airline leaders barely say the word. The irony is that the sector generating the most data (bookings, routes, pricing, weather) is the one integrating the least AI at the top. While hotels are starting to use dynamic pricing with machine learning, airlines are still discussing capacity in Excel. The gap will show. Source: TNMT (Lufthansa Innovation Hub).
What we are watching
Airbus A320 replacement: in the coming months, airlines will start positioning with conditional orders. Those who wait until 2030 will pay more.
EU flight refund rules: the final legislative process could close before year-end. Travel agencies need to prepare their cost argument now.
TikTok as a booking channel: Expedia's bet with IShowSpeed could mark a turning point if conversion holds. We are tracking the return data.
Skift Global Forum: just two months until it kicks off in New York. AI in travel and the new traveler profile will be central topics.
As we said yesterday in Verano en línea con 2025 e invierno con impulso aéreo, the sector is in a moment of false calm. Today's news confirms three tensions simmering beneath the surface: EU regulation against agencies, the generational shift in booking behavior, and airlines' slow AI adoption. Those not moving on these three fronts will be playing defense next year. And in summer, that costs money.
Quick questions
When will the Airbus A320 replacement fly?
Airbus confirmed that the new aircraft replacing the A320 will start flying by 2035. CEO Guillaume Faury announced it to Aviation Week, stating the project is not affected by Boeing's delays.
What does the new EU refund rule mean for travel agencies?
The EU agreement will require 100% refunds on canceled flights, including agency booking fees. ECTAA warns that agencies will have to refund fees for services already provided without being responsible for the cancellation.
How is TikTok changing hotel selection?
Generation Z discovers hotels on TikTok before using search engines, then reviews their experience on the same platform. Hotels need to invest in creator platforms and monitor video reputation, not just OTA ratings.
Startups
The travel startups we follow, plus the ones surfacing in today's news.
In today's news
SelfbookCheckout y pagos one-click para reservas directas de hoteles
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