Gen Z Is Upending Business Travel Payments
A new generation of business travelers is hitting the road, and they’re bringing their payment habits with them.
Gen Z’s Arrival in Corporate Travel—A Catalyst for Change
The landscape of business travel is rapidly evolving with the arrival of Generation Z—a cohort defined by its digital prowess and demand for seamless experiences. Born between 1997 and 2012, Gen Z is now entering the workforce in significant numbers and, as they do, they’re disrupting traditional corporate travel payment practices.
This disruption isn’t just about convenience; it represents a fundamental shift in expectations around payment technologies, expense management, and the integration of fintech into business travel. In a 2024 GBTA survey, over 65% of companies reported that payment preferences among young professionals are at the heart of their evolving travel policies.
From Plastic Cards to Mobile Wallets: The Instruments of Change
Unlike their predecessors, Gen Z business travelers are less likely to tolerate outdated paper-based processes or wait weeks for reimbursements. Instead, they expect to use digital wallets, mobile payments, and contactless cards—tools that mirror personal spending habits shaped by years of app-based banking and e-commerce.
According to Deloitte’s 2024 Global Millennial and Gen Z Survey, 79% of Gen Z respondents favor mobile payment options over corporate cards or cash advances during business trips. Mobile-native platforms like Apple Pay, Google Pay, and instant reimbursement apps are now considered essential, pushing employers to reevaluate their travel technology stacks.
Expense Management: Adapting to Instant Expectations
Traditional expense management—often synonymous with manual receipts and clunky desktop tools—stands in stark contrast to Gen Z’s expectations for automation, real-time tracking, and user-friendly interfaces. Expense management software providers such as Expensify, SAP Concur, and TravelBank are racing to integrate seamless mobile capture, AI-driven receipt parsing, and direct payouts to bank accounts or digital wallets.
“You can’t ask a 24-year-old who’s grown up with Venmo and peer-to-peer apps to jump through bureaucratic hoops for expense reimbursement,” notes Janice Evans, VP of Corporate Solutions at a leading travel fintech firm. “They expect near-instant closure, and so do we if we want to remain competitive as an employer.”
The result? Companies are increasingly investing in platforms that bring transparency and speed to expense reporting, auto-approval workflows, and one-click reconciliation—all key demands from Gen Z professionals.
Compliance and Security—New Technologies, New Risks?
While technological adoption brings efficiency, it also raises concerns around compliance and fraud prevention. Mobile payment adoption requires robust authentication, clear guardrails for spending, and integration with compliance software. For travel managers, the challenge is to balance the flexibility Gen Z craves with the controls required for policy and regulatory adherence.
A 2024 survey by the Association of Corporate Travel Executives (ACTE) found that while 60% of travel managers support mobile wallets, nearly half have yet to update their expense policies to accommodate platform-specific risks. Next-generation solutions embed AI-driven anomaly detection and real-time policy enforcement, helping strike this delicate balance.
Fintech Partnerships: B2B Payments Gear Up
As Gen Z’s influence grows, fintech companies are partnering with travel management firms to future-proof business travel payments. Startups like BILL, Brex, and Airbase have launched integrations with major travel platforms, offering virtual cards for trips, real-time budgeting analytics, and automated compliance checks.
“The business travel sector is a proving ground for consumer fintech trends at scale,” says Rachel Huang, Senior Analyst at Skift Research. “We’re seeing adoption of features like instant payments, virtual cards, and even buy-now, pay-later for corporate trips, all catalyzed by Gen Z user demands.”
Opportunities and Obstacles—What’s Next for Companies?
For businesses, adapting to Gen Z’s payment expectations is no longer optional. It’s an imperative for retaining young talent, reducing administrative costs, and streamlining travel programs. Companies that lag run the risk of making themselves unattractive to a growing portion of the workforce—and inefficient for everyone else.
Key action steps for travel managers and CFOs include:
- Assessing and updating payment policy to allow digital and mobile-first options
- Investing in integrated travel and expense platforms with real-time visibility
- Ensuring robust cybersecurity and compliance safeguards are in place
- Educating employees and finance teams on evolving technologies and fraud risks
Leading companies—especially in tech, consulting, and fast-growth sectors—are already piloting mobile-first travel payment programs, with positive feedback on efficiency and satisfaction from young professionals.
The Broader Impact: How Gen Z Is Reshaping Business Travel
The influence of Gen Z isn’t limited to payments. They are also driving shifts in travel policy toward sustainability, diversity of supplier options, and well-being, all of which shape how travel programs are designed and measured. Flexibility, transparency, and user-centricity are the new watchwords.
According to GBTA, 71% of companies who have adopted digital payments see an uptick in traveler satisfaction scores, and a 23% reduction in reimbursement cycle times. As Gen Z’s numbers—and their influence—only continue to grow, the laggards will face increased pressure to catch up.

