Evening Standard

TOURIST BONANZA AFTER BREXIT VOTE

VISITORS FLOCK TO LONDON ATTRACTION­S AND HOTELS THANKS TO THE WEAK POUND

- Jonathan Prynn and David Churchill

LONDON is enjoying a remarkable “Brexit boom” in tourism as visitors flock to the capital in record numbers to take advantage of the pound’s fall in value.

The sudden 13 per cent currency depreciati­on triggered by the Leave vote left sterling at its lowest level against the dollar for more than 30 years at one stage — turning the capital into a “bargain destinatio­n” for millions of travellers, according to tourism chiefs.

Hotels, airlines and attraction­s all reported a dramatic spike for London bookings in July, with British “staycation” visitors put off travelling abroad by the increased cost of holidays on the Continent also contributi­ng to the surge.

Tourism Alliance chairman Bernard Donoghue said initial research by his organisati­on suggested there are 18 per cent more foreign visitors and 11 per cent more British tourists in the capital this July compared with the same month last year. He said: “We know people are responding very well to the London Is Open campaign.”

Online accommodat­ion service Airbnb said it saw a 24 per cent uplift in London visits in the month after the June 23 referendum compared with the month before, as guests from 164 countries booked to stay at homes in the capital.

Its general manager James McClure said: “Post-Brexit London is more popular and diverse than ever.”

Europe’s biggest flight booking website Opodo said travel from the Continent to London was up by 42 per cent in the four weeks after the referendum, with the biggest increases

seen in travellers from Denmark, Latvia, Estonia and Norway.

Major West End stores are also cashing in, with trading at Fortnum & Mason in the past fortnight running at 20 per cent above the same period last year.

Chief executive Ewan Venters said Chinese, US and European visitors were spending more than last year in the Piccadilly store as they found their spending money is going further.

He said: “Every hour or so I’m being told by my team of another customer spending £2,000 or £3,000.”

Philip Guarino, Europe director at consultant China Luxury Advisors, said: “There has been a significan­t jump in demand for travel to the UK repor ted by leading Chinese tour operators, with some I’ve heard about completely selling all availabili­ty.”

Mr Donoghue said museums and other attraction­s including Westminste­r Abbey, the London Transport Museum in Covent Garden and the RAF Museum in Hendon, have seen “significan­t” increases in visitor numbers.

Forward bookings for the annual public opening of Buckingham Palace are said to be well ahead of last year and Hampton Court’s Magic Garden has also been a huge success.

Cultural attraction­s pulling in visitors to the West End include Harry Potter and the Cursed Child at the Palace Theatre, for which 250,000 more tickets are to be released next week. Hotels are even busier than usual, with fivestar landmarks such as Claridge’s and the Connaught enjoying one of the best Julys in their history and guests increasing­ly upgrading from rooms to suites.

The HotelsComb­ined website’s UK and Ireland country manager Dmitrijus Konovalova­s said: “Searches for London hotels by UK travellers have increased 22 per cent in the 30 days since the EU referendum result.

“In the same period we’ve seen jumps in foreign searches for stays in the city. Those from Italy are up 23 per cent, Germany 20 per cent and Spain 15 per cent. There was a doubling of interest from Saudi Arabia and an 18 per cent rise in searches from Hong Kong. London remains firmly on the map for both domestic and overseas travellers.”

Willie Walsh, boss of British Airways’ parent company IAG, told the Standard: “London continues to be a destinatio­n that is attractive to tourists and workers, which is good for our business.”

 ??  ?? Popular show: Jamie Parker and Sam Clemmett in the Harry Potter play
Popular show: Jamie Parker and Sam Clemmett in the Harry Potter play

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom