Notitur July 5, 2026
Travel Industry Intelligence
Revenue & Distribution · Hotels · AirlinesPublished July 5, 20265 min read

Imserso 2026, Radisson matches OTAs, airlines and entertainment, Cabo Verde, Russia and Google AI travel

JSBy Joan SanzCurated by Joan Sanz. · July 5, 2026 · Follow on LinkedIn
Voice reading · ~7 min

The industry faces the peak summer demand with two open fronts: the direct distribution war turns into real-time tactics, while airlines look for new loyalty levers beyond seats. Avoris is already warming up for the 2026-2027 Imserso season, Radisson turns OTA monitoring into its best conversion weapon, and airlines begin to see concerts and sports as a recurring revenue stream. In addition, Cabo Verde enters the US radar after its World Cup milestone, and an uncomfortable figure comes from Russia: 19% of its aircraft fleet is grounded.

Today's brief

Avoris intensifies the hunt for pensioners for Imserso 2026

The company that controls two of the social tourism program lots has launched a social media campaign to attract new pensioners for the 2026-2027 season, with sales starting in September. Preferente reveals that the strategy aims to get ahead of the competition in a segment where price and senior traveler trust are crucial.

Avoris's move confirms that social tourism remains a pillar of guaranteed occupancy in low season, but the battle for the traveler is fought earlier every year.

Radisson puts OTAs in a live price loop

Radisson Hotel Group has launched a price matching system that monitors in real time the rates of Booking, Expedia, Agoda and Google Hotels for each of its properties. When it detects a lower price on an OTA, it matches it and redirects the customer to the direct website. Hospitality.today details that the system turns continuous OTA monitoring into the conversion trigger.

In the middle of peak summer demand, every decimal of price matters. Radisson's strategy could mark a before and after in how chains manage their available rates against intermediaries. As we reported yesterday in Volotea demands €450,000 from ITA for copying its loyalty program, direct distribution is at the center of the debate.

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Airlines and travel

Airlines turn live entertainment into a loyalty strategy

Delta, United and other major airlines are investing in sponsorships of theaters, arenas and festivals as part of their loyalty programs. Skift analyzes how these spaces become a permanent showcase to attract premium travelers. The question is whether this spending translates into bookings or just brand awareness.

Cabo Verde rides the World Cup wave to attract American tourists

Cabo Verde's national team qualified for the FIFA World Cup, and the country is already seeing a spike in searches from the United States. With 1.2 million tourists per year, mostly Europeans on all-inclusive packages, the challenge is turning that interest into actual bookings. Skift highlights that many Americans still can't place the archipelago on a map, but the media impact of sports can change that.

What we're watching: whether airlines and tour operators launch direct routes or specific packages for the US market leading up to the World Cup.

Russia: 19% of its aircraft fleet grounded this summer

According to data from the Moscow newspaper Kommersant, reported by Preferente, nearly one in five Russian aircraft is not operational this summer. Sanctions related to the conflict in Ukraine have left the country without access to spare parts and maintenance, reducing seat supply and driving up domestic and international flight prices.

Google closes the AI travel loop: 62% of travelers come back to Google to book

Hospitality.today reveals a fact that OTAs and hotels should take seriously: 62% of travelers who start their search with AI assistants (ChatGPT, Perplexity or similar) end up returning to Google to book. Google knows this and is already preparing an integrated checkout to close the loop without leaving its ecosystem.

AI in travel

AI investment in travel tech is concentrated in large corporations

The Lufthansa Innovation Hub has published an analysis of AI investment trends in the travel and mobility sector. TNMT concludes that large corporations, airlines, OTAs and hotel chains, are leading the investments, while startups struggle to find their niche. AI in travel is not being disruptive from the outside, it is being integrated from within.

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What we are watching

In a market where technology allows real-time reaction to competitor moves, distribution is no longer decided in annual negotiations, but in milliseconds of code. Those without dynamic pricing systems and connected OTA monitoring are flying blind in the middle of peak summer. And in high season, that is a luxury few can afford.

Quick questions

When do Imserso 2026-2027 sales start?
Official sales start in September 2026. Avoris has already launched a social media campaign to attract new pensioners ahead of that date.
How does Radisson's price match work?
Radisson monitors rates from Booking, Expedia, Agoda and Google Hotels in real time. When it finds a lower price, it matches it and redirects the customer to the direct website.
Which airlines are betting on entertainment as a loyalty strategy?
Delta, United and other major airlines are sponsoring theaters, arenas and festivals to attract and retain premium travelers, according to a Skift analysis.
Why can Cabo Verde attract more American tourists?
Its qualification for the FIFA World Cup has boosted searches from the US, although the country receives 1.2 million tourists per year, mostly Europeans on all-inclusive packages.
How many Russian aircraft are grounded this summer?
19% of Russia's aircraft fleet is not operational, according to Kommersant, due to sanctions that block access to spare parts and maintenance.

Startups

The travel startups we follow, plus the ones surfacing in today's news.

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