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NEWS
Year of the temazcal: Spafinder Wellness unveils 2016 Spa & Wellness Trends Forecast
POSTED 13 Jan 2016 . BY Jane Kitchen
Spafinder Wellness president Susie Ellis
Spafinder Wellness president Susie Ellis
Spafinder Wellness 365 announced its 2016 Spa & Wellness Top Ten Trends Forecast in a webinar yesterday (12 January), identifying health, fitness, technology and cultural influences that are likely to make their way into the spa world.

This is the 13th year the company has produced the trends report. President Susie Ellis presented the trends along with Spafinder research director Beth McGroarty, who authored the 90-page report.

“We’re committed to mega-trends,” said McGroarty, before introducing what the organisation has deemed to be the biggest trends for spa this year.

1 “Surf’s Up: the new wave of wellness”

The US$130bn surfing and stand-up paddleboard market is having a huge influence on the spa world, with a demographic that is quickly changing, adding more well-educated, high-earning women, said McGroarty.

“Surfing and stand-up paddleboard are becoming one of the world’s hottest wellness travel trends,” she explained.

The inclusion of stand-up paddleboard in the trend also covers the easy wellness connection of paddleboard yoga, which is becoming increasingly popular.

McGroarty pointed to resorts like Komune Bali, that marry a destination spa and wellness resort with surfing classes or Surf Simply in Costa Rica. She also said there are new frontiers in surfing from India to Iceland, as the surfers are always looking for the next big wave.

“Surfing and wellness is just going to grow,” she said. “It’s an obsession – if you get bitten, you become obsessed.”

2. “Sexual Wellbeing: taboo no more”

Sexual wellness will become increasingly important, said McGroarty, whether it’s through sensual fitness like burlesque classes, pole dancing or yoga for better sex, or through orgasmic meditation or alternative fertility centres.

“Every kind of wellbeing is being explored right now,” said McGroarty. “People are getting more serious about wellness.”

She pointed to Sensual Healing Harmony – or Shh – a women’s-only retreat programme that helps women build their confidence and sensuality through workshops and therapies.

Additionally, LGBT travel is changing tourism at a rapid pace, said McGroarty.

3. Temazcal

The temazcal – an indigenous Mexican sweat lodge steeped in tradition and ritual – will be taking centre-stage in the spa world, according to Spafinder.

“This is the year of the temazcal,” said Ellis, explaining that the No. 1 luxury travel trend is that people want local, indigenous, cultural experiences, and that spiritual health is valued alongside physical health.

In much the same way the hammam has expanded well beyond Turkey, “you’re going to see the temazcal go global,” said Ellis.

While the temazcal has its roots in traditional Mexican culture, spas such as Sense by Rosewood or Mission del Sol Resort & Spa are increasingly incorporating contemporary temazcals into their offerings.

4. “Parenting Well: serious spa and wellness for kids”

Parents are turning to the same wellness therapies they use to better their children’s lives, said McGroarty.

A generation facing unprecedented levels of childhood obesity, screen addictions and stress and anxiety is fuelling this trend, and we’re already seeing mindfulness incorporated in schools and kids taking to the mat with yoga classes.

There is a growing trend of ‘bodywork instead of homework’ that focuses on getting kids active, and wellness family vacations will become increasingly important.

“Programmes improving children’s wellbeing will drive the spa and wellness industry, because it just has to,” said Ellis.

5. “The Adrenaline and Zen Cocktail: resetting the mind and body”

High-adrenaline, super-rush experiences paired with deep relaxation will become increasingly popular, said McGroarty.

“There is a profound mind/body impact of combining an adrenaline rush with Zen relaxation,” she explained. “This is not a paradox; it’s a destination.”

Whether it’s driving a racecar on a frozen circuit at Hotel Sacacomie in Canada or taking a symbolic leap at Campowerment, a sleepover camp for adults, the combination of super-extreme and wellness is one that works.

6. “Well-Fests: festivals shift from wasted to wellness”

Music festivals and other events are increasingly incorporating wellness into their lineup, and single-day wellness festivals like The Big Quiet in New York are growing in popularity.

“We’re digitally interconnected, but we’re still lonely,” said McGroarty, and wellness festivals are a way for us to connect in person.

Events like Wanderlust – international, multi-day celebrations of mindful living – or Festival Number 6 in Wales, which incorporates wellness activities like paddleboarding on the estuary into its music and cultural lineup, are becoming increasingly popular worldwide, and group meditation in many forms is a growing trend.

“It’s about being part of an event,” said McGroarty. “Wellness events will be a standard search within travel.”

Also part of the trend: the spa industry’s own Global Wellness Day, an international celebration of wellness set to take place 11 June this year.

7. “On Demand: Uber-izing spa and wellness”

An increased demand for immediacy and expanded hours, combined with more consumers who rely on app-driven services, is fuelling the Uberization of the spa industry, with companies like Zeel and Soothe that offer massage-on-demand growing rapidly.

“I think we’re just seeing the tip of the iceberg,” said Ellis.

Additionally, Ellis said she sees room for both on-location and at-home service to flourish.

“The question is, how can these be combined?” she said.

8. “Skincare gets Seoul-ful: the Korean beauty explosion 2.0”

Korean skincare is exploding as a trend, with stores like Sephora launching entire K-Beauty sections, and Macy’s partnering with Peach & Lily for a bricks-and-mortar store.

Involving a multi-step process involving cleansers, creams, sheet masks, pore treatments, overnight masks, essence oils and more, Korean skincare is already shaking up the way skincare is shown at retail, organising products by steps rather than brands.

“It’s a new paradigm in beauty,” said McGroarty. “It’s proactive rather than reactive, deliberately meditative, and explores self-care as a right, not beauty as a luxury.”

With Korean skincare companies launching 20 to 30 products a month, “the speed and intensity is making Korea a world headquarters for skincare,” said McGroarty.

Additionally, Korean spas also follow a multi-step circuit, said McGroarty, and involve the whole family.

“They’re very social and very affordable,” she said. “This slow, more meditative self-care is a welcome shift and a metaphor for what’s happening in wellness.”

9. “Healthy cruising: the ship of excess has set sail”

Today’s cruise ships are creating some of the largest and most comprehensive spa and wellness facilities in the world, said Ellis, and with cruise ship travel showing a 6.55 per cent annual growth rate, there is an increasing opportunity for wellness to take centre-stage.

Today’s cruise ship spas are no longer in the bowels of the ship, but are front-and-centre, with beautiful designs and lots of natural light. Wellness brands like Canyon Ranch are now on board cruise ships, and a rise in popularity of river cruising offers additional opportunities for growth.

“The marketplace is repositioning around wellness,” said Ellis.

On-shore wellness experiences and voluntourism are also big trends, and wellness cruises could become places of medical tourism, said Ellis.

10. “Workplace Wellness Grows Up: creating a culture of wellness”

Workplace wellness is not new, but is going into a second phase, said McGroarty.

Companies are no longer asking whether workplace wellness makes sense financially, as there have been many studies showing it does, but instead are shifting towards caring about people.

With the average Fortune 500 company spending 80 per cent of its profits on employee medical costs, according to Ellis, there is “a huge opportunity for spa and wellness, because they are going to be looking for people to help them lower those costs.”

Additionally, things like financial wellness, non-standard work hours, mobile working and extreme leave will become increasingly important.

“The culture of wellness will shift to a culture of purpose,” said Ellis.
RELATED STORIES
  Spafinder Wellness 365 partners with eMindful for “The 1% Challenge”


Spafinder Wellness 365 has partnered with online course provider eMindful to launch “The 1% Challenge,” a programme designed to help participants take a mindful approach to small, incremental changes that over time can help them reach and maintain their weight management, stress, pain management, fitness and other goals.
  Wellness opportunities abound for travel industry at large, suggests panel


A panel at the World Travel Market in London yesterday addressed the issue of “Attracting High-Yield Travellers via Wellness Tourism.”
  Winners of 2015 Wellness Travel Awards revealed


The winners of the 2015 Wellness Travel Awards were announced by Spafinder Wellness 365 today (4 November) at the World Travel Market in London.
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HCM News: Taking GLP-1s is linked to a decline in physical activity
People taking GLP-1 weight loss medications such as Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro and Zepbound may be losing weight, but they’re also becoming less physically active, according to new research presented at the ENDO 2026 annual meeting of the Endocrine Society
Mubadala makes €1 billion bid for Pierre and Vacances
Abu Dhabi-based investment firm Mubadala Capital has made a binding, fully financed €1 billion offer to acquire Pierre and Vacances SA, the European holiday resort operator behind the continental European Center Parcs business.
Synergy The Retreat Show launches resource for retreat business leaders to showcase specialisms
Global retreat trade show, Synergy The Retreat Show, has launched a resource called The Source, which hosts an open-access online Transformation Series programme.
The SATCC announces first five-day Living with Cancer and Beyond retreat
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News   Products   Magazine   Subscribe
NEWS
Year of the temazcal: Spafinder Wellness unveils 2016 Spa & Wellness Trends Forecast
POSTED 13 Jan 2016 . BY Jane Kitchen
Spafinder Wellness president Susie Ellis
Spafinder Wellness president Susie Ellis
Spafinder Wellness 365 announced its 2016 Spa & Wellness Top Ten Trends Forecast in a webinar yesterday (12 January), identifying health, fitness, technology and cultural influences that are likely to make their way into the spa world.

This is the 13th year the company has produced the trends report. President Susie Ellis presented the trends along with Spafinder research director Beth McGroarty, who authored the 90-page report.

“We’re committed to mega-trends,” said McGroarty, before introducing what the organisation has deemed to be the biggest trends for spa this year.

1 “Surf’s Up: the new wave of wellness”

The US$130bn surfing and stand-up paddleboard market is having a huge influence on the spa world, with a demographic that is quickly changing, adding more well-educated, high-earning women, said McGroarty.

“Surfing and stand-up paddleboard are becoming one of the world’s hottest wellness travel trends,” she explained.

The inclusion of stand-up paddleboard in the trend also covers the easy wellness connection of paddleboard yoga, which is becoming increasingly popular.

McGroarty pointed to resorts like Komune Bali, that marry a destination spa and wellness resort with surfing classes or Surf Simply in Costa Rica. She also said there are new frontiers in surfing from India to Iceland, as the surfers are always looking for the next big wave.

“Surfing and wellness is just going to grow,” she said. “It’s an obsession – if you get bitten, you become obsessed.”

2. “Sexual Wellbeing: taboo no more”

Sexual wellness will become increasingly important, said McGroarty, whether it’s through sensual fitness like burlesque classes, pole dancing or yoga for better sex, or through orgasmic meditation or alternative fertility centres.

“Every kind of wellbeing is being explored right now,” said McGroarty. “People are getting more serious about wellness.”

She pointed to Sensual Healing Harmony – or Shh – a women’s-only retreat programme that helps women build their confidence and sensuality through workshops and therapies.

Additionally, LGBT travel is changing tourism at a rapid pace, said McGroarty.

3. Temazcal

The temazcal – an indigenous Mexican sweat lodge steeped in tradition and ritual – will be taking centre-stage in the spa world, according to Spafinder.

“This is the year of the temazcal,” said Ellis, explaining that the No. 1 luxury travel trend is that people want local, indigenous, cultural experiences, and that spiritual health is valued alongside physical health.

In much the same way the hammam has expanded well beyond Turkey, “you’re going to see the temazcal go global,” said Ellis.

While the temazcal has its roots in traditional Mexican culture, spas such as Sense by Rosewood or Mission del Sol Resort & Spa are increasingly incorporating contemporary temazcals into their offerings.

4. “Parenting Well: serious spa and wellness for kids”

Parents are turning to the same wellness therapies they use to better their children’s lives, said McGroarty.

A generation facing unprecedented levels of childhood obesity, screen addictions and stress and anxiety is fuelling this trend, and we’re already seeing mindfulness incorporated in schools and kids taking to the mat with yoga classes.

There is a growing trend of ‘bodywork instead of homework’ that focuses on getting kids active, and wellness family vacations will become increasingly important.

“Programmes improving children’s wellbeing will drive the spa and wellness industry, because it just has to,” said Ellis.

5. “The Adrenaline and Zen Cocktail: resetting the mind and body”

High-adrenaline, super-rush experiences paired with deep relaxation will become increasingly popular, said McGroarty.

“There is a profound mind/body impact of combining an adrenaline rush with Zen relaxation,” she explained. “This is not a paradox; it’s a destination.”

Whether it’s driving a racecar on a frozen circuit at Hotel Sacacomie in Canada or taking a symbolic leap at Campowerment, a sleepover camp for adults, the combination of super-extreme and wellness is one that works.

6. “Well-Fests: festivals shift from wasted to wellness”

Music festivals and other events are increasingly incorporating wellness into their lineup, and single-day wellness festivals like The Big Quiet in New York are growing in popularity.

“We’re digitally interconnected, but we’re still lonely,” said McGroarty, and wellness festivals are a way for us to connect in person.

Events like Wanderlust – international, multi-day celebrations of mindful living – or Festival Number 6 in Wales, which incorporates wellness activities like paddleboarding on the estuary into its music and cultural lineup, are becoming increasingly popular worldwide, and group meditation in many forms is a growing trend.

“It’s about being part of an event,” said McGroarty. “Wellness events will be a standard search within travel.”

Also part of the trend: the spa industry’s own Global Wellness Day, an international celebration of wellness set to take place 11 June this year.

7. “On Demand: Uber-izing spa and wellness”

An increased demand for immediacy and expanded hours, combined with more consumers who rely on app-driven services, is fuelling the Uberization of the spa industry, with companies like Zeel and Soothe that offer massage-on-demand growing rapidly.

“I think we’re just seeing the tip of the iceberg,” said Ellis.

Additionally, Ellis said she sees room for both on-location and at-home service to flourish.

“The question is, how can these be combined?” she said.

8. “Skincare gets Seoul-ful: the Korean beauty explosion 2.0”

Korean skincare is exploding as a trend, with stores like Sephora launching entire K-Beauty sections, and Macy’s partnering with Peach & Lily for a bricks-and-mortar store.

Involving a multi-step process involving cleansers, creams, sheet masks, pore treatments, overnight masks, essence oils and more, Korean skincare is already shaking up the way skincare is shown at retail, organising products by steps rather than brands.

“It’s a new paradigm in beauty,” said McGroarty. “It’s proactive rather than reactive, deliberately meditative, and explores self-care as a right, not beauty as a luxury.”

With Korean skincare companies launching 20 to 30 products a month, “the speed and intensity is making Korea a world headquarters for skincare,” said McGroarty.

Additionally, Korean spas also follow a multi-step circuit, said McGroarty, and involve the whole family.

“They’re very social and very affordable,” she said. “This slow, more meditative self-care is a welcome shift and a metaphor for what’s happening in wellness.”

9. “Healthy cruising: the ship of excess has set sail”

Today’s cruise ships are creating some of the largest and most comprehensive spa and wellness facilities in the world, said Ellis, and with cruise ship travel showing a 6.55 per cent annual growth rate, there is an increasing opportunity for wellness to take centre-stage.

Today’s cruise ship spas are no longer in the bowels of the ship, but are front-and-centre, with beautiful designs and lots of natural light. Wellness brands like Canyon Ranch are now on board cruise ships, and a rise in popularity of river cruising offers additional opportunities for growth.

“The marketplace is repositioning around wellness,” said Ellis.

On-shore wellness experiences and voluntourism are also big trends, and wellness cruises could become places of medical tourism, said Ellis.

10. “Workplace Wellness Grows Up: creating a culture of wellness”

Workplace wellness is not new, but is going into a second phase, said McGroarty.

Companies are no longer asking whether workplace wellness makes sense financially, as there have been many studies showing it does, but instead are shifting towards caring about people.

With the average Fortune 500 company spending 80 per cent of its profits on employee medical costs, according to Ellis, there is “a huge opportunity for spa and wellness, because they are going to be looking for people to help them lower those costs.”

Additionally, things like financial wellness, non-standard work hours, mobile working and extreme leave will become increasingly important.

“The culture of wellness will shift to a culture of purpose,” said Ellis.
RELATED STORIES
Spafinder Wellness 365 partners with eMindful for “The 1% Challenge”


Spafinder Wellness 365 has partnered with online course provider eMindful to launch “The 1% Challenge,” a programme designed to help participants take a mindful approach to small, incremental changes that over time can help them reach and maintain their weight management, stress, pain management, fitness and other goals.
Wellness opportunities abound for travel industry at large, suggests panel


A panel at the World Travel Market in London yesterday addressed the issue of “Attracting High-Yield Travellers via Wellness Tourism.”
Winners of 2015 Wellness Travel Awards revealed


The winners of the 2015 Wellness Travel Awards were announced by Spafinder Wellness 365 today (4 November) at the World Travel Market in London.
MORE NEWS
HCM News: Taking GLP-1s is linked to a decline in physical activity
People taking GLP-1 weight loss medications such as Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro and Zepbound may be losing weight, but they’re also becoming less physically active, according to new research presented at the ENDO 2026 annual meeting of the Endocrine Society
Mubadala makes €1 billion bid for Pierre and Vacances
Abu Dhabi-based investment firm Mubadala Capital has made a binding, fully financed €1 billion offer to acquire Pierre and Vacances SA, the European holiday resort operator behind the continental European Center Parcs business.
Synergy The Retreat Show launches resource for retreat business leaders to showcase specialisms
Global retreat trade show, Synergy The Retreat Show, has launched a resource called The Source, which hosts an open-access online Transformation Series programme.
The SATCC announces first five-day Living with Cancer and Beyond retreat
The Standards Authority for Touch in Cancer Care (SATCC) charity has announced its first five- day Living with Cancer and Beyond retreat, which will be held at Carden Park Hotel and Spa in Cheshire, UK, between 1 and 5 September.
Palazzo di Varignana launches family wellbeing and longevity retreat in Emilia Romagna
Palazzo di Varignana, in the Emilia Romagna region of Italy, has created a new tailored health programme designed specifically for families.
Ansana Wellness and Spa debuts at Patmos Aktis as it joins Marriott
Patmos Aktis, a Luxury Collection Resort and Spa, has opened in Greece, with a renovated and rebranded wellness offering called Ansana Wellness and Spa.
+ More news   
 
FEATURED SUPPLIERS

Longevity in spas: a strategic choice, not a default setting
Longevity has become one of the most debated concepts in contemporary wellness. [more...]

Glow beyond protection: meet Comfort Zone Hydramemory Hybrid Glow SPF 30
Sun protection is no longer just about shielding the skin – it's about enhancing it. [more...]
+ More featured suppliers  
COMPANY PROFILES
TAC | The Assistant Company

Founded in 2001, TAC is an owner-managed company with more than 110 employees and four locations: in [more...]
+ More profiles  
CATALOGUE GALLERY
+ More catalogues  

DIRECTORY
+ More directory  
DIARY

 

26-27 Jun 2026

The Longevity Show

Tobacco Docks, London, United Kingdom
03-05 Jul 2026

World Championship in Massage

Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark
+ More diary  
 


ADVERTISE . CONTACT US

Leisure Media
Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385

©Cybertrek 2026

ABOUT LEISURE MEDIA
LEISURE MEDIA MAGAZINES
LEISURE MEDIA HANDBOOKS
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