AI momentum builds across Europe’s national tourism organisations
- 9/8/2025
- 59 Day
The rapid development of emerging
technologies is reshaping industries around the world, including the tourism
sector. The European Travel Commission (ETC) has today published the findings
of its European mapping study on artificial intelligence use within National
Tourism Organisations (NTOs).
This spring, ETC members completed a comprehensive
survey covering AI adoption, its benefits, and governance and investigating two
factors: the readiness of national tourism boards for long-term success
deploying AI, and current observed gains from AI use. This report was conducted
by Kairos Future – an internationally operating futures research and strategy
consultancy – which has been working with AI-driven analytics with ETC since
2010.
The study finds that AI is already reshaping
day-to-day operations across Europe’s National Tourism Organisations. A handful
of European destinations have emerged as early adopters, high in readiness and
perceived AI usefulness, reporting tangible productivity and quality gains.
Significant insights from the study include:
Early movers, many testers – A small cadre of NTOs act
as early adopters, while the majority run short-term pilots designed to gauge
feasibility rather than embed AI operationally.
Staff on board – Employee sentiment is consistently
favourable, with curiosity high and overt resistance low.
Marketing leads the way – Marketing teams report
clearer use-cases (such as automated content generation) and therefore higher
maturity scores than research departments, who consider the technology useful
but still exploratory.
Tailored investment could help drive usage – Limited
AI expertise, sparse training and the absence of a roadmap are some of the main
barriers, with marketing teams also highlighting tighter budgets.
Practitioners in marketing report more immediate,
visible value than research teams, with 72% of departments citing its use in
copywriting. Marketing departments have also noted its usefulness in
streamlining internal processes, such as brainstorming and testing content
formats. While researchers tend to consider the technology exploratory, 72% of
NTO’s state that AI is valuable for desk research and used in areas like
sentiment analysis, translation, coding, and transcriptions.
The report also focuses on how such technologies can
be successfully applied within tourism marketing and research functions. It
shares lessons from early adopters, outlines potential risks, and presents
practical recommendations tailored to the specific context of NTOs. The
following steps are recommended for the further development of AI adoption:
Ring-fence time to experiment – Hackathons, innovation
sprints and workshop days let teams translate enthusiasm into concrete
prototypes.
Prioritise role-specific up-skilling – Facilitate
tailored courses, with internal early adopters as peer instructors, instead of
generic awareness sessions.
Scale budgets in line with results – Incremental
funding tied to pilot outcomes will help convert proof-of-concepts into
sustained operations.
Commenting on the findings, ETC President Miguel Sanz
said: “AI offers new opportunities for Europe’s National Tourism Organisations
to enhance their operations, particularly in areas like marketing and research.
What we are seeing is a wave of experimentation driven by real enthusiasm, but
also shaped by uneven capacity across organisations. This is why it is so
important to create spaces for shared learning, build practical skills, and
support structured innovation. The insights in this study aim to help NTOs
confidently navigate this evolving landscape and unlock the value of AI for
smarter, more responsive, and more resilient tourism strategies.”
The report provides European NTOs with clear,
practical tools to make the most of AI – from roadmaps for marketing, research
and organisational use, to simple do’s and don’ts, real-world case studies, and
an overview of upcoming rules like the EU AI Act. It also offers a future
outlook, reviewing trends and three scenarios for knowledge work in the next
decade. To build on this, ETC will continue supporting members with hands-on
workshops and peer-learning labs.







