Year: 2025 | 2024 | 2023
Startups and innovation more broadly are critical across the travel industry, spurring advancements that often tap into emerging technologies to create better experiences for travelers or to enhance efficiency and operations for suppliers and stakeholders.
Each
November
PhocusWire publishes its selection of the 25 travel startups poised to stand out
in the coming year. There have been 150 companies recognized through the Hot 25 dating back to November 2018 and collectively those startups have raised nearly $2.5 billion dollars.
Funding is but one measure of the health of the travel startup
ecosystem and investor confidence, but it is a meaningful indicator.
PhocusWire’s sister brand, Phocuswright, tracks this data in Phocuswright’s Travel Startups
Interactive Database, which includes more than 4,600 companies that have generated more than 8,500 funding rounds totaling over $200 billion from almost 8,400 investors since 2005.
The data shows that travel funding totaled $5.3
billion in 2023, down significantly from $12 billion in 2022, and that 2024 is at about the same pace with $3.1 billion raised through late June.
The slowdown in travel funding correlates with a broader slowdown in the activity of venture
capital firms. According to a March 2024 Business Insider article containing an analysis of Pitchbook data, “The
number of active traditional VCs in venture capital deals in the United States peaked at 18,504 in 2021. ... That fell to 15,985 in 2022 and to 9,966 last year.”
And yet, while the current macroeconomic environment is challenging, some travel startups have raised significant rounds already this year, notably TravelPerk’s $104 million Series D-1 extension in January, Mews' $110 Series D in March and Guesty’s $130 million Series F in April.
The list
To bring more transparency to travel investors' activity and strategies, PhocusWire last year began publishing a list of the top investors in travel technology.
The list is based on analysis by Phocuswright senior manager of research and innovation, Mike Coletta.
Similar to last year, the analysis highlights the investors that are most active or are contributing the most non-debt funding to the ecosystem. Since the specific amounts of contributions by each investor in each funding round is generally
not publicly available, the analysis zeroed in on those who invested in at least three travel companies between May 2023 and May 2024 and/or have a specific focus on travel and stated plans to invest more.
Based on those criteria, following
is the list of top travel tech investors and a sample of the companies they have invested in during the specified time period, with links to our coverage of the startups' funding as applicable.
“Considering the recent drastic downturn in
funding, and even with signs of softening demand on the horizon, it’s fantastic to see investors continuing to bet on travel, from stalwarts like Thayer, JetBlue Ventures and Plug and Play to newcomers
like Antler and Gaingels,” Coletta said.
- Thayer
Ventures/Derive Ventures – 13 investments including Mews, Point.me, Canary,
Directo
- Antler – 7 investments including Airalo, Unravel and TravelTail
- JetBlue
Ventures – 6 investments including Avnos, NLX and Tomorrow.io
- Plug and Play
Tech Center – 6 investments including Neoke, Point.me and Sherpa
- TechStars – 4 investments including NaviSavi, SquadTrip and TripSlip
- Gaingels – 4 investments including Anyplace, Point.me and Summer
- FJ Labs – 3 investments:
Dharma, Fairlyne and FlyFlat
- SpeedInvest – 3 investments: Fairlyne,
Raus and Smiler
Honorable
mentions:
Investor insights
We also reached out to the companies on this list to gather insights about their investment strategies, how they work with their portfolio companies, where they see opportunities for innovation and their take on the hype around artificial intelligence.
Here are some of those responses, in some cases edited for brevity.
What are the key criteria you consider when evaluating an investment opportunity?
Kristi Choi, early
stage investor at Plug and Play Tech Center: While various factors go into our investment decision-making process, as early-stage investors, strong conviction in the founder(s) is fundamental. Companies will go through various stages and, in
many cases, product iterations. In the end, we’re looking for founder(s) who are focused and decisive, have superior execution skills and know when to make the right turns at the right time. We also
ask ourselves if this is the right person to be solving this exact problem. The answers to these questions should be an easy yes across the board.
Jeroen Arts,
partner in the marketplaces and consumer investment team at SpeedInvest: We pride ourselves with being the first institutional backer in most of our portfolio companies. When you are investing at such an early stage, the most important criteria
we invest in are the people who are building the product and service. In the seed-phase of a company, 99% of the journey is still ahead of the company and, as such, we rate the team and their ability to execute as the most important.
Chris Hemmeter, managing
director at Thayer Ventures: We focus on five things specifically: market dynamics, unit economics, go-to-market engine, progress and people. Specifically, we are looking for large addressable markets or smaller segments that are expanding fast,
strong unit economics that promise capital efficiency, a repeatable go-to-market motion that is consistent with the former characteristics and revenues typically above $2 million to $5 million. People, however, is by far the most important. We are
looking for special leaders who can inspire.
Lorenzo Thione,
managing director of Gaingels: We look at the business opportunity to create a large sustainable company, in a large enough market to drive substantial returns. This also relies on evaluating the company's competitive advantages either rooted
in technology, product or team, and its unit economics. Finally, and probably the most important element we consider is the founding team. Co-investors and valuation come into play too, but they are less central to our investment decisions.
Jeff Weinstein,
partner at FJ Labs: Our favorite startup to invest in is one that is showing early semblances of product market fit, but is not yet at scale. We like our capital to be used for scaling businesses quickly with working unit economics.
How do you like to work with your portfolio companies?
Plug and Play/Choi: We place a lot of trust on the founders that we bet on, and we strive to add value by leveraging our extensive global network to connect our portfolio companies with potential customers, partners and industry experts.
Plug and Play works closely with over 600 corporations globally across 20+ industries, and we are constantly identifying business development opportunities for our portfolio with the goal of shortening sales cycles. Our job is to be master matchmakers.
For the earlier stage companies, our model can significantly help with achieving and fine-tuning product market fit.
Gaingels/Thione: We work much like a traditional minority investor that doesn't take board seats. Because we have a large portfolio we tend to be more reactive rather than proactive, but we can step in to support our companies whenever
they need. Our large portfolio and network of investing members make Gaingels a particularly valuable and supportive investor for companies seeking introductions to potential business partners, customers and/or other investors. We also help our portfolio
companies by bringing diverse capital on their cap table and making room for underrepresented investors, helping them with developing their boards of director and advisory, by sourcing and recommending candidates from underrepresented backgrounds
and supporting them in their recruiting efforts by helping them tap into pools of diverse talent they may not have access to.
Thayer/Hemmeter: We consider ourselves a strategic investor and like to say that we work with our
companies between board meetings, not just at board meetings. We try to serve as their business development, sales and strategy partner and focus on opening doors and driving action. I personally spent the bulk of my career building businesses and
understand that helping entrepreneurs connect with potential customers is the primary definition of “value add.”
Where do you see the biggest opportunity for innovation today in travel?
Plug and Play/Choi: We’re currently having many conversations about convergence in the travel industry with increasingly integrated vertical software. There’s
been heightened demand from consumers and agents for a one-stop shop, yet the industry remains fragmented, causing friction. We’ve been seeing more of this convergence happening lately, especially
on the corporate travel side, with significant activity in fintech, expense management and travel booking. We’re keeping a close eye on other sub-sectors to identify similar trends and patterns.
Thayer/Hemmeter:
The accommodations tech stack, vertical software and services, activities and experiences, related payments solutions, loyalty and consumer are some of the areas where we are concentrating. We are also very interested in AI but only as it pertains
to the application layer and how it solves interesting problems in the travel space.
SpeedInvest/Arts: On the consumer side, we see a clear shift toward a highly personalized and seamless travel booking experience.
Rather than providing customers with "information," we see platforms leveraging AI and data to offer highly tailored travel itineraries. Additionally, with the rapid buildup of infrastructure and
capabilities of AI, there is a clear path to autonomous travel agents that will eventually take care of the tedious process of booking your trip.
In a similar vein, yet less obvious, we see AI also being a big agent for change on the B2B
side. There are a lot of new technologies coming online that will allow us to run leaner and smarter travel operations. Whether it’s at airports, in hotels or somewhere along the way of your journey,
we believe there will be a new set of travel startups to start to resolve some of the current inefficiencies.
How are you seeing the hype around AI impact the travel startup landscape?
Plug and Play/Choi: There was a lot of noise to sift through in the earlier months. I think some of that noise has died down, and we’re now starting to see impactful applications develop
that are hyper-focused on reducing costs and improving service quality in travel. There is a ton of potential, and the travel startup landscape will reflect that. However, like in many other industries, there is currently a significant gap in corporate
adoption of generative AI applications, so it’ll take some time.
FJ Labs/Weinstein: AI is seismically shifting the playing field for startups, so we think a lot about defensibility
(see the excellent strategy book 7 Powers by Hamilton Helmer for a framework that we think about sustainable value creation). For many AI startups, we worry that they are running on an increasingly
accelerating treadmill, consuming massive amounts of capital just to stay in place. So we prefer to focus on narrow applications of AI within existing workflows or software tools that benefit from AI, rather than AI itself.
Thayer/Hemmeter:
AI for travel startups is a tool, not a solution in and of itself. What’s most interesting is the business problem being solved — in other words, how the tool is being leveraged in the application.
It
’s an important and exciting new toolbox, to be sure, and many startups are figuring out how to solve problems in new ways. That said, integrating AI into a bad idea doesn’t
get very far. It’s also important to note that unlike past innovations that caught incumbent players flat-footed, AI has been a central part of their work for many years, and they have the power
to maintain leadership. It’s unlikely that any startup will “out-AI” the big guys, while that wasn’t
true for mobile, for example.
Gaingels/Thione: While there are a subset of companies that attract headlines, investors and attention and therefore are able to raise at inflated valuation, the true economic impact of AI in
the long term is unlikely to be hyped. There is an enormous amount of VC spending that is ahead of the value unlock chain because it's funding compute deployment, and some of that capital may be at risk of being devalued by future improvements on
the hardware side, but the true unlock of value from a productivity and staffing point of view for the small and medium enterprise, especially in traditional/boring industries is yet to be seen.
What is your outlook for startup funding generally across the travel industry for the next few years?
SpeedInvest/Arts: While travel has picked up considerably since the end of the pandemic, as people are happy to be back exploring the world, VC investment in the travel industry has - somewhat counterintuitively - traveled
the opposite direction (see chart below from Dealroom). We see less travel startups being funded (across all stages), and the lower amount of total invested capital
in travel startups is getting more concentrated in a smaller group of “winners.” I do believe that this strong bifurcation in the market will ease a bit in the coming 12-24 months; however, fundraising for startups in general, and travel startups
specifically, has changed 180 degrees vs. its peak year of 2021.
Plug and Play/Choi: We are optimistic. There’s still a lot of work to be done and lots of opportunities to build meaningful technology across the travel industry.
Thayer/Hemmeter: I am bullish, but not from a “number of deals” and “total dollars deployed” perspective. I am bullish
about the quality of startups in travel and the dislocation and disruption happening across the $10 trillion value chain. In my view, looking at total number of deals and absolute dollars deployed says more about venture capital than startups. Too
many shoot-for-the-moon ideas got funded when cash was free, and VCs were eager to deploy. At the same time, round sized grew too large as VCs looked to fully invest in order to get back to their LPs with the next Roman numeral fund. The result was
a great deal of noise in the market that, ironically, generated headwinds for the best companies and too much cash that harmed the teams that took it on. We are, thankfully, living in different times and are back to quality, efficiency and grit. That
this is happening against a dynamic global industry like travel is very exciting. I think we will continue to see great companies born during this period, and disciplined funding will certainly be there to support them.
Gaingels/Thione:
People are back to traveling to equal or higher than pre-pandemic levels. They are also finding ways to do more with less because of rising inflation, so wherever technology can help with identifying travel opportunities while reducing cost, maximizing
utilization and inventory management, removing intermediary inefficiencies that increase costs and renewing a focus on experiential rather than luxury travel, will be a space ripe for investment and value creation across the travel value chain.
FJ Labs/Weinstein:
One of my favorite trends right now is investing in startups that dramatically improve productivity within existing communication workflows. This means that people can become customers without requiring massive behavior changes. For example, we invested
in FlyFlat, which is a business-class flight booking service where the entire UI/UX lives within Whatsapp/SMS/your messenger of choice.