TY - JOUR
T1 - Travel in the Mirror
T2 - How Home Stereotypes Shape Travel Intentions
AU - Kolbl, Živa
AU - Micevski, Milena
AU - Arslanagić-Kalajdžić, Maja
AU - Zenker, Sebastian
AU - Herz, Marc
N1 - Published online: 29 January 2026.
PY - 2026/8
Y1 - 2026/8
N2 - Tourists develop expectations and behaviors based on stereotypes about destinations; however, the anchoring role of home place stereotypes in contrasting home with destination stereotypes - “inside” (home) versus “out” (destination) perspective remains unexplored. These differences have important implications for how travelers evaluate and select destinations. Drawing on the stereotype content model, social comparison and reference point theory, we examine empirically how home place stereotypes act as cognitive anchors shaping the comparative evaluation of destination stereotypes (warmth and competence) and in turn, how these comparisons inform travel intentions (N = 497). Contrary to the similarity-attraction paradigm, our findings reveal that greater home-destination stereotype differences strengthen the warmth/competence–visit intention link. By linking our data with secondary data, we show that destination smartness amplifies the role of competence differences in these travel intentions. These insights challenge one-sided views: travelers see destinations through the “mirror” of home-place stereotypes, with the destination's environmental context shaping decisions.
AB - Tourists develop expectations and behaviors based on stereotypes about destinations; however, the anchoring role of home place stereotypes in contrasting home with destination stereotypes - “inside” (home) versus “out” (destination) perspective remains unexplored. These differences have important implications for how travelers evaluate and select destinations. Drawing on the stereotype content model, social comparison and reference point theory, we examine empirically how home place stereotypes act as cognitive anchors shaping the comparative evaluation of destination stereotypes (warmth and competence) and in turn, how these comparisons inform travel intentions (N = 497). Contrary to the similarity-attraction paradigm, our findings reveal that greater home-destination stereotype differences strengthen the warmth/competence–visit intention link. By linking our data with secondary data, we show that destination smartness amplifies the role of competence differences in these travel intentions. These insights challenge one-sided views: travelers see destinations through the “mirror” of home-place stereotypes, with the destination's environmental context shaping decisions.
KW - Stereotype content model
KW - Reference point theory
KW - Social comparison theory
KW - Similarity attraction paradigm
KW - Multi-level modeling
KW - Stereotype content model
KW - Reference point theory
KW - Social comparison theory
KW - Similarity attraction paradigm
KW - Multi-level modeling
U2 - 10.1016/j.tourman.2026.105395
DO - 10.1016/j.tourman.2026.105395
M3 - Journal article
SN - 0261-5177
VL - 115
JO - Tourism Management
JF - Tourism Management
M1 - 105395
ER -