International tourism up 5% in first half of 2025
- 9/23/2025
- 44 Day
According to UN Tourism, almost 690
million tourists travelled internationally between January and June 2025, about
33 million more than in the same period of 2024, though results were mixed
among regions and subregions.
UN Tourism Secretary-General Zurab Pololikashvili
said: “In the face of global challenges, international tourism continues to see
strong momentum and resilience. The first half of 2025 brought growing arrival
numbers and revenues for most destinations around the world, which contribute
to local economies, jobs and livelihoods. Yet, this also reminds us of our
great responsibility to ensure this growth is sustainable and inclusive and to
work with all local stakeholders in that sense.”
Africa saw strongest performance while
Asia Pacific continued to rebound
The newest edition of the World Tourism Barometer
assesses the sector’s performance by region and sub-region in the first six
months of 2025. Key takeaways include:
Africa saw a 12% increase
in January-June 2025 compared to the same period last year. Both North Africa
(+14%) and Subsaharan Africa (+11%) recorded double-digit growth this period.
Europe welcomed nearly
340 million international tourists this first half of 2025, about 4% more than
in 2024 and 7% more than in 2019. Northern, Western and Southern Mediterranean
Europe all recorded 3% growth this period despite uneven monthly results.
Central and Eastern Europe continued to rebound strongly (+9%), but remained
11% below 2019 levels, according to available data.
The Americas
recorded 3% growth in January-June 2025, with mixed results across subregions.
While South America (+14%) continued to enjoy solid growth, Central America saw
a 2% increase in arrivals and North America saw flat results (+0%) mostly due
to small declines in the United States and Canada. The Caribbean (+0%) also saw
weaker performance partly due to softening demand from its major source market,
the United States.
The Middle East
recorded 4% fewer arrivals this six-month period, though after a very strong
post-pandemic rebound, with 29% more arrivals than the same period of 2019, the
strongest regional results relative to 2019.
Arrivals in Asia and the Pacific grew 11% this
period, which is 92% of the pre-pandemic figure (-8% compared to 2019).
North-East Asia (+20%) saw the strongest performance relative to 2024, though
it remained 8% below 2019 levels.
Some of the highest growth rates among large
destinations in H1 2025 were recorded by Japan and Vietnam (+21%), the
Republic of Korea (+15%), Morocco (+19%), Mexico and the Netherlands (+7%).
Malaysia and Indonesia both recorded 9% growth and Hong Kong (China) 7%, though
arrivals remained somewhat below 2019 levels in these destinations.
The world’s top destinations France (+5% through May)
and Spain (+5%) also recorded solid growth in arrivals this period.
According to IATA, both international air traffic
(RPKs) and international air capacity (ASKs) grew 7% in January-June 2025
versus 2024. Global occupancy in accommodation establishments reached 69% in
June 2025, slightly below 70% in June 2024.
Occupancy reached 71% in July 2025 (same as in July 2024) based on STR
data.
Many destinations reported strong growth in receipts
in the first half of 2025
Monthly data on international tourism receipts show
strong earnings through June 2025 in major destinations such as Japan (+18%),
the United Kingdom (+13% through March), France (+9%), Spain (+8%) and Türkiye
(+8%).
Strong travel demand can also be seen in outbound
spending from some large markets such as China (+16% through March), Spain
(+16%), the UK (+15% through March), Singapore (+10%) and the Republic of Korea
(+8%).
In 2024 international tourism receipts grew 11% to a
record 1,734 billion US dollars, about 14% above pre-pandemic levels (real
terms) reflecting already strong visitor spending around the world last year.
Economic and geopolitical factors continue to pose
important risks
As in previous surveys, the September survey of the
Panel of Tourism Experts and the UN Tourism Confidence Index point to high
transport and accommodation costs as well as other economic factors as the top
two challenges impacting international tourism in 2025.
Tourism inflation is expected to ease from 8.0% in
2024 to 6.8% in 2025 (projections using tourism inflation proxy) but would
remain well above the pre-pandemic value of 3.1% and significantly above
overall inflation (4.3%). According to
the Panel, tourists will continue to seek value for money, but could also
travel closer to home, make shorter trips or spend less, in response to
elevated prices.
Uncertainty derived from economic and geopolitical
tensions can also weigh on travel confidence. Lower consumer confidence was
ranked as the third main factor affecting tourism in the September 2025 survey,
while geopolitical risks (aside from ongoing conflicts) ranked fourth. The
increase in trade tariffs (5th) and Travel requirements (6th) were also major
concerns expressed by the Panel of Experts.
Slight uptick in confidence levels for
September-December 2025
The latest UN Tourism Confidence Index shows a slight
uptick in confidence levels for the last four months of 2025. On a scale of 0
to 200 (where 100 indicates equal performance), Panel Experts gave the period
September-December 2025 a score of 120, up from 114 for May-August.
Some 50% of Panel experts expressed better (44%) or
much better (6%) prospects for September-December, while 33% foresee similar
performance than in 2024. Some 16% expect tourism performance to be worse. This
positive though still cautious outlook is also reflected in the higher
percentage of ‘better’ and ‘much better’ prospects for the year 2025 overall
(60% in the September survey versus 49% in May) according to Panel Experts.
Despite global uncertainty, travel demand is expected
to remain resilient throughout the remainder of the year. UN Tourism’s January
projection of 3% to 5% growth in international arrivals for 2025 remains
unchanged.







