Hospitality
TRAVEL TRENDS DRIVING THE RISE OF BLENDED STAYS IN THE UAE
JS Anand, CEO and Founder, LEVA Hotels
Multi-generational and family travel is becoming a defining trend in the UAE, with 41% of travellers now planning trips with extended family members and actively looking for destinations that balance adventure with relaxation across age groups. At the same time, bleisure travel is gaining momentum as professionals mix work and leisure, often extending trips and choosing flexible short stays.
These shifts are directly contributing to the rise of blended stays across the UAE and wider GCC. What was once described as bleisure or workation is now a common travel pattern, where the boundaries between work, rest, and leisure are increasingly fluid. Travellers are staying longer, choosing lifestyle-led hotels, and expecting spaces that can support multiple needs within a single journey.
This change is closely linked to how work itself has evolved, with hybrid models and greater mobility enabling people to work from almost anywhere. In response, hotels are now viewed as flexible environments that support both productivity and personal time. The UAE is particularly well positioned for this shift, with its strong infrastructure, connectivity, and diverse hospitality offering making extended, blended stays both practical and appealing.
As a result, stay behaviour is changing noticeably. Traditional short business trips are being replaced by longer, more adaptable bookings, with hotels increasingly functioning as multi-purpose living spaces. This trend is influencing design, operations, and pricing strategies, with a stronger emphasis on flexibility and continuity.
Guest expectations have also evolved significantly. Travellers now expect purpose-built work environments within hotels, including co-working areas, meeting pods, and more thoughtful in-room setups that support sustained productivity. At the same time, wellness and lifestyle features like gyms, outdoor spaces, and social areas are now key factors in how people choose where to stay, reflecting a growing focus on balance in travel.
The UAE continues to lead this transformation, supported by a hospitality ecosystem that is closely integrated with retail, business, entertainment, and residential infrastructure. This natural alignment has created the ideal conditions for blended stays to grow and become a long-term feature of the region’s travel landscape.
For developers and investors, this shift is also redefining value creation. Occupancy alone is becoming less indicative of performance, with greater focus placed on a hotel’s ability to support longer stays, adaptable layouts, and multi-functional experiences. Hotels that can seamlessly shift between short-term and extended-stay demand are better positioned for the future of hospitality in the region.
Ultimately, blended stays reflect a deeper structural change in how people approach travel, work, and time away from home. For the UAE and the wider GCC, the opportunity lies in building hospitality experiences that respond to these evolving behaviours and remain aligned with how people choose to live and move today.