The leisure travel company posted Adjusted EBITDA of $225 million in Q1 2026, up 11% year-over-year, led by its Vacation Ownership segment. Multi-year softness in its exchange and travel club business presents a diverging picture.
Key Summary
- Vacation Ownership Adjusted EBITDA jumped 20% on just 6% revenue growth the gap explained largely by resort cost savings, not organic improvement.
- VPG of $3,321 in Q1 2026 is the highest Q1 reading since 2022, recovering from a dip to $3,035 in Q1 2024.
- Travel and Membership revenue hit its lowest Q1 level since 2020. Membership base, transaction volumes, and per-transaction pricing are all contracting simultaneously.
- Adjusted free cash flow was effectively zero in Q1 2026, compared to $152 million a year earlier.
- The loan loss provision grew 41% over four comparable quarters, nearly double the pace of Gross VOI sales growth.
- Fee-for-Service sales have fallen 51% since Q1 2023, a trend management has not addressed publicly.
- Full-year 2026 Adjusted EBITDA guidance of $1.03B–$1.055B was reaffirmed
Travel + Leisure Co. reported net revenue up 3% to $961 million and Adjusted EBITDA up 11% to $225 million for Q1 2026. It reaffirmed its full-year guidance and returned $128 million to shareholders. CEO Michael Brown described the quarter as “a strong start to 2026.”
Historical data provides a clearer comparison between the company’s two operating segments. Vacation Ownership is accelerating, showing growth in both revenue and margin, while Travel and Membership is lagging, with flat or negative results for several quarters.
The Ownership Business, and What’s Driving It
Vacation Ownership revenue rose to $798 million from $755 million a year earlier, a 6% gain. Adjusted EBITDA grew from $159 million to $191 million, up 20%. The disproportionate margin expansion raises the main question.
In late 2025, TNL completed a strategic review of its resort portfolio, identifying 17 properties it considered either too costly to maintain or misaligned with owner demand. The resulting optimisation initiative generated meaningful expense savings in Q1 2026, mainly from maintenance fees on unsold vacation ownership interests, while the company simultaneously took $19 million in inventory write-downs and impairments.
The net effect was positive for EBITDA, but the dynamics should be separated from the underlying sales performance.
On that front, the numbers are encouraging. Tours grew 5% year over year to 161,000. Volume per guest came in at $3,321, the highest Q1 reading since 2022 and above the top end of the company’s own guidance range. VPG had slipped to $3,035 in Q1 2024 before recovering.
The two-year trajectory is upward, though it is worth noting that guidance for Q2 2026 sets VPG at $3,200 to $3,250 below Q1’s level, suggesting management does not expect the outperformance to persist through the year.
Q1 Vacation Ownership: Four-Year View
Year | Q1 2023 | Q1 2024 | Q1 2025 | Q1 2026 |
Revenue ($M) | $685 | $725 | $755 | $798 |
Adj. EBITDA ($M) | $131 | $135 | $159 | $191 |
EBITDA Margin | 19.1% | 18.6% | 21.1% | 23.9% |
Gross VOI Sales ($M) | $454 | $490 | $512 | $549 |
Tours (000s) | 135 | 155 | 153 | 161 |
VPG ($) | $3,215 | $3,035 | $3,212 | $3,321 |
Loan Loss Provision ($M) | $71 | $78 | $91 | $100 |
Fee-for-Service Sales ($M) | $45 | $43 | $37 | $22 |
Two metrics in that table have not featured in TNL’s public commentary but are worth tracking. The loan loss provision reached $100 million in Q1 2026, up from $71 million three years earlier, a 41% increase.
Over the same period, Gross VOI sales grew 21%. Provisions are expanding at roughly twice the rate of originations, which either reflects deliberate conservatism in anticipation of softer consumer credit conditions or some pressure on the quality of the receivables portfolio. TNL does not elaborate on which.
Fee-for-Service sales fell 51% from $45 million in Q1 2023 to $22 million in Q1 2026. The contraction remains unaddressed in earnings communications.
The Exchange Network and Its Persistent Challenges
Travel and Membership is where the picture gets more complicated. The segment posted Q1 2026 revenue of $165 million, down 8% year over year, with Adjusted EBITDA falling 13% to $59 million. Q1 2026 is the segment’s weakest first quarter since the pandemic year of 2020.
The downward trend in Travel and Membership spans four comparable Q1 periods, while Vacation Ownership rose over the same period. Specifically, average exchange membership in Travel and Membership fell from 3.51 million in Q1 2023 to 3.29 million in Q1 2026, and exchange transactions dropped from 300,000 to 211,000.
The segment’s revenue per total transaction, stable between 2023 and 2025, fell from $312 to $280 in the most recent quarter. Meanwhile, metrics in Vacation Ownership improved over the same period, supporting the segment’s recent gains.
Management links Q1’s margin drop to increased Travel Club transactions, which have lower margins. Although volumes grew from 175,000 to 206,000, revenue per transaction fell 19% to $207. The volume gain did not offset pricing compression, suggesting further internal challenges.
Q1 Travel and Membership: Four-Year View
Year | Q1 2023 | Q1 2024 | Q1 2025 | Q1 2026 |
Revenue ($M) | $200 | $193 | $180 | $165 |
Adj. EBITDA ($M) | $71 | $75 | $68 | $59 |
Avg. Exchange Members (000s) | 3,512 | 3,493 | 3,362 | 3,291 |
Exchange Transactions (000s) | 300 | 275 | 240 | 211 |
Travel Club Rev/Transaction ($) | $247 | $256 | $257 | $207 |
Subscription Revenue ($M) | $45 | $45 | $43 | $42 |
Transaction Revenue ($M) | $147 | $140 | $130 | $117 |
Cash Flow and the Capital Structure
Net cash from operating activities was $38 million in Q1 2026, against $121 million a year earlier. Adjusted free cash flow was effectively zero, compared to $152 million in Q1 2025. The company attributed the shift to higher inventory acquisition spending and net repayments on non-recourse vacation ownership debt.
At the same time, TNL returned $128 million to shareholders in the quarter, including $87 million in share repurchases at a weighted-average price of $72.51 and $41 million in dividends. The company closed a $325 million term securitisation in late March, with a weighted-average coupon of 5.11% and a 98% advance rate.
Corporate debt stood at $3.6 billion as of March 31, with leverage below 3.2x under the company’s covenant measure.
The combination of near-zero free cash flow and active shareholder returns is characteristic of timeshare operators, where securitised receivables provide liquidity largely independent of reported operating cash generation.
Brands and the Expansion Strategy
TNL’s experiential brand portfolio continued to expand in Q1. Margaritaville Vacation Club and Eddie Bauer Adventure Club both recorded growth during the quarter, per management commentary, though individual brand financials are not broken out.
Sports Illustrated Resorts announced its fourth location, in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, a market anchored by Louisiana State University and Southern University.
The Baton Rouge selection fits a pattern. TNL has been systematically targeting university-adjacent leisure markets under the Sports Illustrated Resorts banner, operating on the premise that these locations reach demographics less served by the company’s legacy Club Wyndham and WorldMark inventory.
Whether newer brands are generating meaningfully different owner-acquisition economics or VPG profiles is not disclosed in current reporting.
Guidance and What It Implies
TNL guided Q2 2026 Adjusted EBITDA of $260 million to $270 million, with Gross VOI sales of $660 million to $690 million. Full-year Adjusted EBITDA guidance was reaffirmed at $1.03 billion to $1.055 billion.
The full-year midpoint of approximately $1.04 billion represents modest growth over 2025, which implies a deceleration from Q1’s 11% EBITDA growth rate through the remainder of the year.
Management did not specify whether that reflects resort-optimisation savings that are front-loaded, anticipated continued softness in Travel and Membership, or simply a conservative guidance practice.
Disclaimer: This article is published for informational purposes only. The data and results referenced are sourced from public disclosures and do not constitute investment advice, financial guidance, or a recommendation to buy or sell any security.



