April 7, 2026
bootheconomy.com
Signal-first coverage of trade shows, festivals, food trucks, pop-ups, and the wider Booth Economy.
Trade shows / industry scale
TSNN releases updated trade show attendance and ranking data for 2025.
Trade Show News Network, April 2026
The biggest shows keep consolidating attention, exhibitors, and spending. What the rankings don’t capture is the gap between headline events and the smaller and mid-sized environments where most people in the Booth Economy actually work. The top of the list gets bigger; the middle stays uneven.
Experiential / brand activations
Brand activation budgets continue to rise heading into the 2026 event season.
Big brands are still treating physical presence as worth paying for. They call it experiential marketing; at ground level it still comes down to the same old question: how do you get someone to stop? What starts at high-budget activations has a way of trickling down to smaller booths and market sellers, usually a cycle or two later.
Event economics
Venue, labor, and logistics costs hit new highs for the 2025 event season, industry survey finds.
Exhibit City News, February 2026
Fees, travel, lodging, and logistics all continue to put pressure on the math. More people are still showing up — but showing up is not cheap. The cost of participating keeps rising, which makes the margin for a bad show smaller than ever.
Event discovery
Eventbrite study: 61% of attendees still find local events through Facebook despite ongoing algorithm changes limiting organic reach.
Organizers are now paying to reach audiences on a platform that used to be free — while attendees keep going there out of habit. For vendors, that creates a specific exposure risk: your show’s promotional reach is largely a function of the organizer’s ad budget. The vendor backchannel keeps filling the gap that official discovery leaves open.
Festivals and fairs
Festival attendance up 8% nationally in 2025, but vendor satisfaction surveys tell a different story.
Festivals & Events International, March 2026
Organizers can point to crowds. Vendors still need buying customers. A packed event and a good event are not the same thing. In the Booth Economy, foot traffic is not performance — and attendance data rarely captures what actually happened inside the booth.
Food trucks
Fleet operators now account for nearly 30% of new food truck registrations in major metros, up from 18% in 2021.
Nation’s Restaurant News, April 2026
The romantic image of the lone owner-operator is increasingly at odds with how the business actually works. Fleets offer economies of scale — shared commissary kitchens, centralized booking, bulk insurance — that individual operators can’t match. The indie story survives in the branding long after the structure has quietly changed.
Consumer behavior
Consumer spending on experiences outpaced goods for the fourth consecutive year, McKinsey annual survey finds.
People are still willing to spend money to go somewhere, do something, and be around other people. That is good news for fairs, festivals, markets, and trade events. The pressure it creates is on the booth itself — which is increasingly expected not just to display products, but to be a reason to stop.
The vendor backchannel
Facebook groups for craft and market vendors now number in the thousands; largest communities top 80,000 members.
Facebook groups, Reddit threads, DMs, and side conversations are where people often get the real story — about events, fees, turnout, promoter behavior, and whether a show is worth trying. The unofficial review system is often more important than the official one. It is also entirely invisible to the people running the events.
Patterns emerging
- — Bigger shows are getting bigger.
- — Smaller and mid-tier events remain uneven.
- — Costs keep rising.
- — Discovery is still broken.
- — Vendors are relying more on each other for intelligence.
- “Busy” still does not mean “profitable.”
The BoothEconomy take
The broad pattern is not hard to see. There is still plenty of life in the event world. People want to gather. Brands want to show up. Organizers have calendars to fill. But underneath that, the Booth Economy is getting more fragmented, more expensive, and more dependent on informal knowledge.
That makes it harder for newcomers. It also makes it more important to pay attention to what is happening beyond your own booth, your own category, or your own weekend show schedule.
That is the point of BoothEconomy Wire.