The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

A road to success: North Coast 500’s £10m boost

- By Stuart Findlay sfindlay@sundaypost.com

TOURISTS flocking to the Highlands to drive the North Coast 500 have delivered a £ 10 million boost to the region’s economy, it has been claimed.

A study carried out by the University of Glasgow’s training and employment research unit said the Highlands had seen an extra 29,000 visitors and £ 9 million had been added to the local economy because of the scenic route during its first full year in 2016.

Economists and tourism bodies are busy crunching the numbers for the not yet finished 2017 season but Inverness Chamber of Commerce chief executive Stewart Nicol believes the figures will has increased by at least 10% to more than £ 10m – the equivalent of a £20,000 boost for each mile of the route – after one of the busiest ever summers for tourists in the north.

“It has been an exceptiona­lly busy summer,” he said.

“The North Coast 500 has been an outstandin­g success, it has really captured people’s imaginatio­ns.

“There has been a rise in the number of internatio­nal visitors coming to Inverness and the route has been a key element of the success.

“It’s been a promising year for us,” he said.

“The key points seem to be really busy and tourists are still raving about how great it is.

“A lot of my customers are Americans and Canadians but I have seen a lot of people from continenta­l Europe bringing their own bikes across to drive the route.”

In July, The Sunday Post reported that Borders couple David and Sharon McLean had ditched the rat race and brought Britain’s most remote service station after falling in love with the North Coast 500.

The brave decision paid off as their fledging business in Kinlochewe, Wester Ross, has been mobbed with supercar drivers and hordes of adventure motorcycli­sts.

David said: “It’s been a very good season for us. It’s really exceeded our hopes for the first year.

“I’d say the majority are UK-based that are doing the route but there are plenty from further afield too, we had boys from New Delhi who passed through and had rented motorbikes to do it.”

The 2016 research was commission­ed by Highlands and Islands Enterprise and showed an average 26% rise in visitor numbers to the areas of the Highlands involved in the route.

If the anecdotes from the 2017 season are anything to go by, that trend looks certain to continue.

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