Bridging the Attitude–Behavior Gap in Sustainable Tourism: An Extended TPB Model of Green Hotel Purchase Intentions
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Araújo, Arthur; Andrés Marques, Isabel; López Moreno, Lorenza; Carrasco García, Patricia MaríaEditorial
MDPI
Materia
green hotel sustainability Theory of Planned Behavior 
Fecha
2025-10-15Referencia bibliográfica
Araújo, A., Marques, I. A., Moreno, L. L., & García, P. C. (2025). Bridging the Attitude–Behavior Gap in Sustainable Tourism: An Extended TPB Model of Green Hotel Purchase Intentions. Tourism and Hospitality, 6(4), 215. https://doi.org/10.3390/tourhosp6040215
Resumen
The awareness of tourism’s environmental impact has increased interest in sustainable alternatives such as green hotels, yet tourists often fail to translate pro-environmental attitudes
into action, reflecting the attitude–behavior gap. This study extends the Theory of Planned
Behavior (TPB) by incorporating Environmental Knowledge and Climate Change-Related
Risk Perceptions (CC-RRPs) as background factors and testing their effects on Green Hotel
Purchase Intentions (GHPIs) among Spanish travelers. Data from 1442 respondents were
analyzed using covariance-based Structural Equation Modeling (SEM) with bootstrapped
mediation testing. Results show that In-Group Norms are the strongest predictor of GHPIs,
followed by Eco-Hotel Attitudes, while Perceived Behavioral Control (PBC) has a weaker
but significant effect. Environmental Knowledge predicts all three mediators, and CC-RRPs
predict Attitudes and Norms but not PBC. Crucially, both antecedents affect GHPIs only indirectly, supporting a mediation-based framework. These findings clarify the distinct roles
of Environmental Knowledge as a cognitive antecedent and CC-RRPs as cognitive–affective
evaluations that motivate attitudes and norms, while also highlighting the centrality of
social influence in a Southern European context. Beyond theoretical contributions, the
results underscore the importance of trust and authenticity: addressing greenwashing
through transparent communication and credible certification frameworks is essential to
ensure sustainable hospitality choices.





