Photo courtesy: Aurora Expeditions
Expert guides are now the #1 reason people choose expedition travel
Forget ticking off a destination first. For today’s expedition traveller, the single biggest decision driver is now who’s on the ship, not just where it’s going. New research from Aurora Expeditions shows that expert-led experience has overtaken destination as the primary reason people choose an operator, reflecting a deeper, more intentional shift in how people explore the world.
In a survey of more than 700 expeditioners, 95.3% rated the expertise of the expedition team as the most important factor when selecting an operator. Itinerary came a very close second at 94.2%, followed by small ship size (93.3%) and landing opportunities (92.9%).
You can read more about Aurora’s approach to expedition travel and its fleet on the official website: Aurora Expeditions.
From “where” to “how”: the new expedition calculus
For decades, travel decisions started with the destination: Antarctica, the Galápagos, the Arctic. But Aurora’s research suggests that the real question has changed. Travellers are now asking who they’re going with and what those people know just as much as they’re asking where they’re sailing.
Wildlife and nature encounters remain the biggest inspiration for expedition travel, cited by 74% of respondents. Adventure, active exploration ranked second at 70%. Bucket-list ambitions are still there (33%), but they’re increasingly paired with learning and enrichment (29%) and photography (29%).
Justin Ewin, Aurora’s Global Head of Product, sums it up: “It’s no longer just about where you go, but how you experience it. The expertise of the expedition team plays a critical role in shaping that experience, from interpreting wildlife encounters to providing deeper context around the environments we visit.”
That’s exactly the kind of calculus Aurora built around in its most recent Antarctic season, delivering more than 800 landings across over 30 voyages, supported by a 1:7 guide-to-guest ratio. That’s a level of small-group, expert-led access that’s hard to replicate on larger vessels.
Expedition is no longer just a once-in

-a-lifetime trip
Expedition travel has long been sold as that once-in-a-lifetime, “I’ve done Antarctica, I’m done” moment. But the new data suggests that framing is losing its grip. Around 20% of Aurora’s passengers are now repeat guests, returning to explore new regions and deepen their connection with the natural world.
This shift from tick-box travel to ongoing exploration means operators need to think differently about long-term relationships and programme design. It’s no longer just about selling a first trip; it’s about building a journey that keeps people coming back.
Solo travellers are reshaping the category
Solo travel is accelerating across the cruise and expedition sector. According to CLIA, 12% of cruise travellers chose to sail solo in 2024—double the previous year. At Aurora, that figure is even higher: 26% of its passengers sail solo, well above the industry average.
In response, Aurora is expanding solo capacity across its fleet. Its newest ship, the Douglas Mawson, includes dedicated solo cabins and up to 10 solo staterooms per sailing with no single supplement, making it easier for independent travellers to explore without paying extra.
What this means for expedition travellers
The big takeaway is clear: the best expedition trips are no longer about just the map. They’re about access, context and leadership. Travellers want to be with people who can interpret wildlife, explain ecosystems and bring depth to every landing. They want small ships, real landings and a guide who knows their way around the ice, the jungle or the open ocean.
For Aurora, that means investing in expertise, small-group formats and flexible itineraries that let people explore more deeply. For travellers, it means choosing operators who treat their guides as the heart of the experience, not just the nice bonus.
If that’s the kind of expedition travel you’re looking for—where expert guidance is the cornerstone and depth of experience is the baseline—Aurora’s new vessels and programme are built exactly for that. Explore their current and upcoming voyages on the official site: Aurora Expeditions.
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