2026 Business Traveler &
Rotational Assignment Survey
Based on responses from 157 organizations across diverse industries, this report examines how companies are navigating the growing complexity of frequent business travel and rotational programs — and the compliance landscape reshaping every decision.



157
Organizations across diverse industries and employee populations
76%
Cite compliance risk as the top challenge for frequent business travelers
83%
Do not have a formal policy or framework for frequent business travelers
- Responses from 157 organizations
- Covers frequent business travel governance
- U.S. domestic & international rotational programs
- Repayment agreements & cost recovery analysis

A mobility Landscape Reshaped by Risk and Regulation
The 2026 survey reveals a mobility landscape marked by increasing complexity, regulatory scrutiny, and cost sensitivity. Frequent business travel and rotational assignments are no longer managed through standardized models — they are governed through tailored, risk-informed approaches.
Organizations are formalizing definitions, thresholds, and escalation triggers to determine when extended travel transitions into an assignment, with frameworks driven largely by tax compliance requirements, permanent establishment risk, and duty-of-care obligations.
While many organizations continue to maintain U.S. domestic and international rotational programs, there is wide variation in program ownership, duration, volume, family support, and policy design — introducing meaningful governance challenges.
Key Findings from 157 Orginizations
Compliance exposure, administrative burden, and policy complexity remain primary concerns across both programs. Organizations that proactively align mobility governance with legal and tax oversight will be better positioned to balance business agility with employee experience.
Repayment agreements remain prevalent, but their structure is increasingly shaped by state, local, and international legal constraints — requiring tighter coordination across mobility, legal, and tax stakeholders.
KEY FINDING 01
Formalizing the Travel-to-Assignment Threshold
Only 11% have a formal policy for frequent business travelers, while 83% have no formal policy or framework in place at all.
KEY FINDING 02
Compliance Risk is the #1 Challenge
76% cite compliance risk as their biggest challenge related to frequent business travelers, followed by tax risk (65%) and immigration (59%)
KEY FINDING 03
Leadership Development Drives Rotational Programs
69% of U.S. domestic and 67% of international rotational programs are driven primarily by leadership development objectives.
KEY FINDING 04
Repayment Agreements Near Universal
93% of U.S. domestic rotational programs require a repayment agreement where allowed by state law — with 62% set at 24 months.
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- INSIDE THE REPORT -
Preview the 2026 Survey
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