Caribbean Travel Marketplace Returns Next Week in Antigua, Bringing Hotels, Tour Operators, and Thousands of Deals Together
Across the Caribbean, hotel sales teams are tightening rate sheets, tourism officials are aligning messaging, and appointment schedules are being finalized down to the minute. Next week, that preparation comes together in Antigua and Barbuda, host of this year’s Caribbean Travel Marketplace, the region’s most important business event for tourism. Produced by the Caribbean Hotel and Tourism Association, […] The post Caribbean Travel Marketplace Returns Next Week in Antigua, Bringing Hotels, Tour Operators, and Thousands of Deals Together appeared first on Caribbean Journal.
Across the Caribbean, hotel sales teams are tightening rate sheets, tourism officials are aligning messaging, and appointment schedules are being finalized down to the minute. Next week, that preparation comes together in Antigua and Barbuda, host of this year’s Caribbean Travel Marketplace, the region’s most important business event for tourism.
Produced by the Caribbean Hotel and Tourism Association, the annual gathering brings the Caribbean’s hotel and destination leaders face-to-face with the tour operators and wholesalers who sell the region to travelers around the world.
Inside The Marketplace Model
Caribbean Travel Marketplace runs on a fixed schedule built around pre-arranged meetings, but it also operates across a dedicated trade show floor where those meetings take place.
Suppliers — from major resort brands to boutique hotels and national tourism boards — host buyers at their booths over two days of tightly managed sessions. An appointment clock directs the flow, moving buyers from one meeting to the next across the floor with only minutes in between.
The environment looks like a traditional trade show at a glance, with branded booths and destination displays, but the activity is highly structured. Every meeting is scheduled in advance, and each conversation centers on business: contract terms, pricing, availability, and how Caribbean product will be packaged and sold in key markets.
It also includes the return of the Direct Booking Summit.
The Numbers Behind The Event
The scale of Marketplace is defined by its density. The most recent figures show more than 9,000 pre-scheduled meetings taking place over the two-day program. More than 175 supplier companies are expected, representing 25 Caribbean destinations.
On the buying side, more than 84 companies attend from 17 international markets, with total delegate numbers approaching 850.
Across the trade floor, those numbers translate into constant movement, with buyers rotating booth to booth throughout the day.
How Antigua Is Preparing To Host
In Antigua and Barbuda, preparations have been building for months. Event spaces are being configured to accommodate the full trade floor, with rows of supplier booths and clear routing to keep the meeting schedule on track.
Hotels across Antigua are preparing for an influx of delegates, many of whom will be experiencing the destination firsthand between sessions. That includes showcasing rooms, restaurants, and on-property experiences to visiting buyers.
The destination’s tourism leadership is also using the moment to highlight airlift, accommodations, and new developments across the twin-island nation, placing Antigua and Barbuda in front of a concentrated group of global travel sellers.
How The Region Is Getting Ready
Across the wider Caribbean, Marketplace prep looks similar from island to island.
Hotels are refining how they present their product — updating seasonal pricing, outlining renovations, and identifying the experiences they want buyers to sell. Sales teams are also prioritizing key partners, particularly those who drive volume in core markets like the United States, Canada, and Europe.
Tourism boards are arriving with broader updates. New and expanded flight service remains a central focus, along with destination campaigns and product highlights.
Buyers are arriving with packed schedules already in place. Many are using Marketplace to adjust their Caribbean portfolios — adding new hotels, renegotiating rates, and securing inventory for upcoming peak travel periods.
Why It Matters For Travelers
Caribbean Travel Marketplace is a closed-door industry event, but what happens across that trade floor shapes the trips travelers book later.
The packages you see on major tour operator sites. The hotels included in bundled vacation deals. The promotions tied to specific travel windows.
Those decisions are negotiated here, across thousands of meetings in Antigua, setting the tone for how the Caribbean is sold globally in the months ahead.
The post Caribbean Travel Marketplace Returns Next Week in Antigua, Bringing Hotels, Tour Operators, and Thousands of Deals Together appeared first on Caribbean Journal.