The Search Shift DMOs Cannot Ignore
The traveler’s research process has fundamentally changed. Rather than clicking through multiple websites to compare options, today’s travelers ask AI assistants a direct question and receive a synthesized answer in seconds.
Nearly 40% of U.S. travelers used generative AI tools to plan trips in 2025, an 11-point increase in just one year. (Phocuswright) Over 60% of Gen Z and Millennials now use AI tools specifically for travel inspiration and itinerary planning. (Simon-Kucher, 2026 Travel Trends Study)
The impact on destination websites is measurable. Generative AI traffic to U.S. travel sites rose 3,500% year-over-year in July 2025, and visitors arriving from AI sources show 36% longer visits and a 44% lower bounce rate compared to other traffic sources. (Adobe Analytics)
These are not passive readers. They are high-intent travelers who arrive already informed. The question for DMOs is whether your website copy is structured in a way that allows AI tools to find, extract, and cite you in those answers at all.
Most destination websites are not. This post explains how to change that.
What AI-Friendly Destination Copywriting Means
AI-friendly destination copywriting is the practice of writing website content so that AI search tools, such as ChatGPT, Google AI Overviews, and Perplexity, can accurately extract, attribute, and recommend your destination in response to traveler queries.
This is distinct from traditional copywriting, which is designed to persuade a human reader who has already arrived on your page. AI-friendly copy must serve two audiences simultaneously: the traveler and the AI system summarizing your content before the traveler ever visits.
This approach sits at the foundation of Generative Engine Optimization (GEO), and the copy on your website is where GEO either succeeds or fails. If your content cannot be read clearly by an AI model, no amount of technical optimization will compensate.
How AI Systems Read Your Website
AI language models do not read your website the way a person does. They scan for structured signals: headings that identify topics, sentences that open with direct answers, lists that contain discrete facts, and definitions that can stand alone without surrounding context.
Large language models cite only 2 to 7 domains per response on average, far fewer than Google’s pages of blue links, and getting into that set requires deliberate optimization, not just good writing. (Frase.io)
Research shows that 44.2% of all LLM citations come from the first 30% of a page’s text, making your introduction prime citation territory. (Frase.io) If your destination page opens with three paragraphs about your organization’s history or a tagline about “unforgettable experiences,” an AI model has already moved on.
Structured data formats receive three times more citations than paragraph-only content, and content with tables is cited 2.5 times more often. (Discovered Labs) The structure of your content is as important as the content itself.
NextGen Destination Marketing
How to write destination content that AI tools extract, cite, and recommend
AI tools like ChatGPT, Google AI Overviews, and Perplexity cite only 2 to 7 domains per response. Apply these six techniques to make your destination one of them.
Lead with a Direct Answer
Open every page, section, and heading with a clear, factual statement. AI models extract the first 1 to 2 sentences of each section first. If your opening is vague, the model moves to a competitor.
Answer first No scene-settingWrite Definitions That Stand Alone
Define your destination, experiences, and geographic identifiers so each definition is fully understood without surrounding text. AI extracts definitions to provide context in traveler answers.
One sentence Specific detailUse Lists and Tables
Convert narrative paragraphs containing multiple items into structured lists or tables. Content with tables is cited 2.5x more often. Apply to events, itineraries, accommodations, and transportation details.
Bullet lists Numbered steps Comparison tablesBuild FAQ Sections on Every Core Page
FAQs are the most cited content format in AI travel responses. Write each question the way a traveler would ask an AI assistant. Each answer must be 2 to 4 sentences and complete on its own.
Conversational Q format No marketing headlinesWrite with Fact Density
Quantitative claims receive 40% higher citation rates than qualitative ones. Replace subjective language with measurable specifics. Source your data. Every major claim should have a number or a named reference behind it.
Numbers Named sources No vague claimsRemove Promotional Filler
AI models cannot extract facts buried in promotional language. Phrases like "breathtaking views" and "unparalleled experiences" carry no informational weight. Replace them with specific, factual statements that survive extraction.
No clichés No superlatives Specifics onlySix Copywriting Techniques for AI Extraction
1. Lead with a Direct Answer
Every page, section, and heading should open with a clear, factual statement. Do not begin with context, history, or inspiration. State the answer first, then support it.
Before: “Nestled in the heart of the Rockies, our destination offers visitors a world of possibility across four stunning seasons…”
After: “Banff National Park receives more than four million visitors annually and offers hiking, skiing, wildlife viewing, and hot springs year-round.”
The second version is citable. The first is not. This principle applies to every page on your website, from the homepage to individual attraction listings.
2. Write Definitions That Stand Alone
AI models extract definitions to provide context when answering traveler questions. If your destination website includes terminology, experiences, or geographic identifiers, define them in a way that makes sense without surrounding copy.
A well-structured definition follows this pattern: state the term, explain what it is in one sentence, and add a specific detail that differentiates it.
Example: “The Blue Ridge Parkway is a 469-mile scenic highway connecting Shenandoah National Park in Virginia to Great Smoky Mountains National Park in North Carolina, recognized as America’s most-visited national park unit.”
That sentence works as a standalone citation. A vague phrase like “a beloved scenic drive through beautiful mountain scenery” does not.
3. Use Lists and Tables for Structured Information
When your content contains multiple items, categories, or comparisons, use formatted lists or tables rather than prose. AI systems process bullet points, numbered steps, and tables to quickly understand key points and reuse them in summaries or citations. (Storychief)
For destination websites, this applies to:
- Seasonal event calendars (formatted as a list with dates, names, and locations)
- Attraction categories (grouped by type with brief descriptors)
- Itinerary suggestions (numbered by day or half-day)
- Accommodation types with pricing ranges and key features
- Transportation options with distance and travel time
Avoid writing these details as flowing narrative paragraphs. An AI cannot reliably extract “there are several wonderful options for families, including a children’s museum and a popular water park” with the same accuracy as a structured list of family-friendly attractions with names and brief descriptions.
4. Build FAQ Sections on Every Core Page
FAQ sections are among the most cited content formats in AI-generated travel responses. They are structured as self-contained question-and-answer units, which maps directly to how travelers phrase queries to AI tools.
FAQPage markup enables AI systems to extract question-and-answer pairs programmatically, and sites with well-structured FAQs on their key topics hold a significant advantage in AI citation. (Incremys)
Every destination landing page, attraction page, and travel planning guide on your site should include a FAQ section. Write the questions the way a traveler would ask an AI assistant, not the way a marketing team would phrase a headline.
Instead of: “What makes our destination special?” Write: “What is the best time of year to visit Asheville, North Carolina?”
Each answer should be two to four sentences, factual, and complete on its own.
5. Write with Authoritative Tone and Fact Density
Vague claims do not get cited. Specific, verifiable facts do.
Analysis of over 30 million citations shows that quantitative claims receive 40% higher citation rates than qualitative statements. (Discovered Labs) Replace subjective language with measurable specifics wherever possible.
Avoid: “Our region is home to incredible dining options for every taste.” Write: “The region has more than 200 independent restaurants, with concentrations in the downtown arts district and the waterfront neighborhood.”
Authoritative tone also means sourcing claims. When you reference visitor numbers, economic impact data, or seasonal patterns, cite the source. Including statistics and citations in your content can increase citation frequency by up to 40%. (Frase) AI models cross-reference claims against known data, and content that matches verifiable records earns higher trust scores.
6. Remove Promotional Filler
Promotional language is invisible to AI extraction. Phrases such as “breathtaking views,” “unparalleled experiences,” and “the perfect destination for every traveler” carry no informational weight and consume space where factual content could sit.
AI models struggle to extract facts hidden inside promotional language, and content that buries information in marketing copy is consistently deprioritized. (ToTheWeb)
This does not mean removing warmth or personality from your writing. It means separating informational content from brand expression. A destination page can be engaging and readable while still opening each section with a direct, extractable fact.
Keep Content Current
AI-cited content is 25.7% fresher than content cited through traditional organic search, and 76.4% of ChatGPT’s most-cited pages were updated within 30 days of citation. (Discovered Labs)
For destination websites, this means updating visitor statistics, seasonal information, event listings, and transportation details on a regular schedule. Add a visible “Last Updated” timestamp to key pages. A page describing fall foliage conditions from three seasons ago will not compete against pages with current information.
The website design and structure of your destination platform also determines how efficiently AI crawlers can access and index your content. Pages with clean HTML, logical heading hierarchies, and fast load times are indexed more accurately than pages with technical performance issues.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What is AI-friendly destination copywriting?
Q: How is writing for AI search different from traditional SEO copywriting?
Q: Which pages on a destination website should be optimized for AI extraction first?
Q: Does good AI copywriting replace traditional SEO?
No. SEO still matters; destinations still need optimized pages, helpful and trustworthy content, and a technically sound site. Visibility in generative AI goes further by requiring content crafted for how AI systems read, understand, and recommend. (nextgendestinationmarketing) Both strategies work together.
The Practical Starting Point
Destination marketers do not need to rewrite every page on their website at once. Start by auditing your five highest-traffic pages against these questions:
- Does each section open with a direct, factual statement?
- Are lists and data presented in structured formats rather than paragraphs?
- Does the page include a FAQ section with conversationally phrased questions?
- Are all statistics and claims specific and, where possible, sourced?
- Has the page been updated within the past 90 days?
Pages that fail these tests represent the clearest opportunities for improvement. As explored in How Generative AI is Transforming Discovery of Destinations in 2025, the destinations that act on this shift early hold a measurable advantage over those that wait.
The copy on your website is your primary asset in AI search. It determines whether your destination is recommended or overlooked before a traveler ever considers clicking through to your site.
References
Phocuswright. Search Slips, AI Surges (2025). phocuswright.com
Simon-Kucher. 2026 Travel Trends Study (Nov 2025). simon-kucher.com
Adobe Analytics. Consumers Embrace Generative AI for Trip Planning (Sep 2025). business.adobe.com
Frase.io. Mastering AI Citations: The Ultimate GEO Playbook. frase.io
Frase.io. The GEO Strategy Workbook. frase.io
Discovered Labs. GEO Content Strategy (Jan 2026). discoveredlabs.com
Incremys. GEO Content Strategy in 2026. incremys.com
StoryChief. How to Structure Content for GEO (Dec 2025). storychief.io
ToTheWeb. GEO: The Complete Guide to AI-First Content Optimization. totheweb.com
