Alexandria, VA — The Global Business Travel Association (GBTA), the world’s leading voice representing the $1.57 trillion global business travel and meetings industry, is urging U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to adopt a balanced and practical approach as it evaluates significant proposed changes to the Electronic System for Travel Authorization (ESTA) requirements. Today, GBTA filed formal comments with CBP outlining the potential competitive, operational and economic consequences of the proposed revisions. Overly burdensome data collection measures and restrictive application processes could disrupt global business travel, undermine corporate mobility, and weaken the U.S.’s position as a premier destination for international travel and meetings ─ notwithstanding the risk of negative impacts on business travelers and the organizations that depend on them. In the U.S. and beyond, business travel is central to global economic health, enabling trade, innovation, investment and person‑to‑person collaboration. GBTA members alone are estimated to directly manage more than USD $363 billion in annual business travel spend. Additionally, according to 2022 GBTA data, business travel had an economic impact of $484 billion in the U.S. and supported six million American jobs. The proposed ESTA changes could introduce unintended consequences that ripple through the entire travel ecosystem such as: According to GBTA’s January 2026 business travel industry poll reflecting feedback from 571 travel industry professionals across 40 countries, concern about the proposed ESTA changes is substantial and widespread: Read here the full comments GBTA filed with the CBP. The Global Business Travel Association (GBTA) is the world's premier business travel and meetings trade organization serving stakeholders across six continents. GBTA and its 9,000+ members represent and advocate for the $1.57 trillion global business travel and meetings industry. GBTA and the GBTA Foundation deliver world-class education, events, research, advocacy, and media to a growing global network of more than 28,000 travel professionals and 125,000 active contacts. For more information, visit GBTA.org and GBTAFoundation.org. Security and efficient business travel are not mutually exclusive. While GBTA strongly supports efforts to protect U.S. borders and enhance traveler security, the proposed changes pose significant risks and could undermine the benefits that business travel brings to organizations who send their employees on international trips to the U.S. and the American destinations who welcome them. A balanced approach will strengthen national security while ensuring that the U.S. remains an accessible, desired and competitive meeting and conference destination for global business. Suzanne Neufang, CEO of GBTA
What’s At Risk
New GBTA Industry Data Shows Widespread Concern
Contact
Debbie Iannaci
GBTA Global Communications, PR & Research
Phone: +1 305 301 7057
Email: diannaci@gbta.org
Organization
Global Business Travel Association (GBTA)
https://www.gbta.org/
107 S West St. Suite 762
USA
- Alexandria, VA 22314
Phone: 703-684-0836
Fax: 703-342-4324
Email: info@nbta.org
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