No Planet-B Attitudes: The Main Driver of Gen Z Travelers’ Willingness to Pay for Sustainable Tourism Destinations
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Willingness to pay for sustainable destinations Environmental beliefs Ecotourism attitudes
Fecha
2025-01-21Referencia bibliográfica
de Araújo, A.F.; Andrés-Marques, I.; López Moreno, L. No Planet-B Attitudes: The Main Driver of Gen Z Travelers’ Willingness to Pay for Sustainable Tourism Destinations. Sustainability 2025, 17, 847. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17030847
Resumen
With consumers becoming increasingly aware of the effects of human activity
on the environment, tourism products and destinations are increasingly marketed as sustainable and socially responsible. As most sustainable practices lead to additional costs,
and tourists’ decisions tend to be price sensitive, achieving sustainability goals necessarily
involves understanding how much more tourists are willing to pay for sustainable practices
as well as the antecedents of such willingness to pay (WTP). The present study aims to advance knowledge on the antecedents of WTP for sustainable destinations (WTP-4-SD), for
which it builds on previous studies employing the Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) and
the New Environmental Paradigm (NEP). In this context, a theoretical model involving ecotourism attitudes, environmental beliefs, climate change-related risk perceptions (CC-RRP),
environmental concern during trip (ECDT), and sustainable consumption behavior (SCB)
as antecedents of WTP-4-SD is proposed. The model was tested based on data collected
through an online survey from a sample of 847 Spanish and Portuguese Gen Z travelers and
analyzed through Structural Equations Modeling (SEM). The findings suggest that a cohesive set of attitudes and beliefs regarding the man–nature relationship, the risks of climate
change, and the role of tourism—which have been labeled “No Planet-B Attitudes”—is
the main driver of WTP-4-SD. The effects of SCB and ECDT on WTP-4-SD have also been
confirmed—although the latter is quite small—as well as those of No Planet-B Attitudes
on both. The findings bring about insights into young travelers’ attitudes towards nature
and the role of tourism in sustainable development, as well as useful implications for
sustainable tourism planning and marketing.





