The Shift From Cash to Contactless
Tourism is rebounding globally, but the way travelers pay has fundamentally changed. According to Discover Global Network, consumers now view vacations as a series of planned payments—and they expect those transactions to be seamless, secure, and digital.
The numbers tell the story. Over 82% of global consumers now embrace contactless payment methods, while traditional cash continues its decline. For merchants in tourist destinations, this shift represents both an opportunity and an imperative: adapt your payment infrastructure or risk losing customers at the point of sale.
What Travelers Want: Security First, Convenience Second
When selecting payment methods for leisure travel, 25% of consumers prioritize security above all else. Discover’s 2025 survey reveals that 59% of travelers are “somewhat concerned” about payment fraud while traveling, with an additional 22% classified as “very concerned.”
This anxiety has driven adoption of digital wallets and contactless cards. Visa data shows that over 70% of GCC travelers now prefer digital wallets—a trend mirrored across global markets. These tools offer encryption and tokenization that cash simply cannot match.
Cross-Border Surge Creates New Demands
The cross-border transaction boom is reshaping merchant requirements. Between June 2023 and June 2024, international transactions reached 771 million, fueled by e-commerce, travel, and remittances. Visa reports that over 50% of international travelers use credit and debit cards, but the landscape is fragmenting.
European markets illustrate this complexity. While traditional cards still dominate with over 60% of transaction volume, Retail Banker International notes that instant payments and mobile wallets are gaining momentum. Festival prepayment bracelets, QR-code venue entry, and tap-to-pay systems are becoming standard expectations for the 25-45 demographic—the cohort leading travel spending.
Merchant Action Items
- Accept digital wallets: Apple Pay, Google Pay, and Samsung Pay reduce friction and fraud simultaneously.
- Enable contactless terminals: Tap-to-pay is now baseline, not premium.
- Display payment clarity: 71% of consumers want help navigating payment options. Clear signage reduces cart abandonment.
- Consider QR and wearable integration: From museum entry to hotel check-in, tap-and-go systems enhance the experience.
Key Takeaways
Contactless payments have moved from convenience to expectation. For travel merchants, the message is clear: security concerns drive payment choice, digital wallets are mainstream, and cross-border travelers expect seamless experiences. Those who fail to adapt risk being bypassed for competitors who understand that in tourism, payment experience is customer experience.
