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Travel payment trends in 2020

Dernière mise à jour : 29 avr. 2020



We’re seeing a range of trends that re-define how people pay for travel. Here are Amadeus’ predictions for how four trends are going to play out in 2020.


Delivering "Strong Customer Authentication"

By now we’ve probably all heard about the importance of delivering the SCA requirement for electronic payments made within the European Economic Area to use two-factor authentication.

But 2020 is when things get real for the travel industry as the revised enforcement of December 31, 2020 draws near.

For airlines, agencies and hotels that sell large volumes indirectly and are part of multi-merchant packages, authenticating card holders with two-factors is far from straightforward. We’re going to see a rush to build in the industry’s new 3D Secure 2.0 Protocol, which helps address this challenge, particularly for direct sales.

When it comes to indirect sales, particularly in the corporate travel world, there’s going to need to be even closer collaboration between issuers, technology partners, travel providers and travel management companies if we’re to rise to this challenge.


The explosion of payment methods will intensify

According to Amadeus Travel Payments Guide data analysis, 2019 marked the year that local, or alternative, methods of payment surpassed cards and cash combined for the first time.

There are now over 300 ways for travelers to pay. Polish mobile payment specialist BLIK was handling around 200,000 transactions just a couple of years ago and is now on course to hit 200 million this year and there are a host of similar examples from right across the world.

In 2020, travel players run the risk to lose out on business simply because they don’t allow people to pay in the way they want.

The U.S. is a card-dominated market but even there, 45% of millennials don’t have a credit card, according to PPRO’s consumer market survey.


Cards are going virtual, 2020 is the tipping point

We’ve been talking about the fraud-reduction and reconciliation benefits of virtual cards for a number of years, but they still represent just a fraction of how agencies pay suppliers like airlines.

This transition is definitely going to ramp-up in 2020 as trends like SCA and NDC-adoption naturally push people towards the data-rich capabilities of virtual payments. There are also moves to put virtual cards in the hands of business travellers via their mobile.

Virtualising card payments is preferable for corporations, travelers, agencies, suppliers, technology companies and the banks - 2020 looks like the tipping point.


Frictionless payments will arrive

A handful of travel brands will deliver a payments experience that can legitimately be described as “frictionless” in 2020.

That means being able to pay how you want, with just a couple of clicks - preferably none - via your device of choice, with foreign exchange transparency and real-time fraud checks that don’t slow down the payment.

And importantly, this is right across the travel experience, whether booking at home or buying lounge access at the airport.


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