Weekend Herald

Visitor arrivals stall at 80pc of pre-Covid levels

- Grant Bradley

Visitor arrivals have plateaued at just over 80 per cent of pre-Covid levels and a full recovery of what was once New Zealand’s top export earner is not expected until

2025.

Latest monthly figures show November visitor arrivals were

303,400, 82 per cent of the preCovid-19 number of 372,100 for the same month in 2019, says Stats NZ. It has been running around that level for several months.

Overseas visitor arrivals were 2.90 million in the November 2023 year, compared to 3.89 million for the same 12 months in 2019, 71 per cent of the pre-pandemic figure.

But there has been a strong bounce-back in November 2023 compared to the same month the previous year, increasing by 70,700 from November 2022.

The biggest changes in arrivals were from China (up 17,100), the US (up 12,600), Korea (up 4900), Japan (up 3100) and India (up 3100).

Before the pandemic, China was the second-largest source of overseas visitors after Australia. Despite having the largest year-onyear increase of any country in November 2023, overseas visitor arrivals from China in that month were still only 52 per cent of the November 2019 number.

While the recovery in inbound tourism has been sluggish, Kiwis are taking overseas holidays at levels close to what they were before Covid hit.

The November 2023 number of New Zealand-resident travellers returning to this country was 97 per cent of the 233,700 total in November 2019.

For the full year to November, 2.6 million Kiwis took trips overseas, down from 3 million who travelled abroad during the same period in 2019.

Continued on C2

Tourism Export Council (TEC) forecasts suggest the return to preCovid tourist numbers is nearly two years away.

Its analysis shows that by the year ended September 2025, total arrivals are expected to top more than 3.9 million, the same as annual arrival figure in 2019.

By September last year, annual arrivals had reached 2.8 million (73 per cent of pre-Covid numbers) and by September this year they are forecast to reach 3.4 million (87 per cent).

Council chief executive Lynda Keene said internatio­nal arrivals for the latest 12 months were 5 per cent higher than forecast last June.

She said the current 2023-24 season was “tracking nicely”.

The council represents inbound tour operators and wouldn’t know how strong summer had been until February.

“In saying that, indicators from operators suggest it will be a good season and arrivals will track towards the new forecast figures,” Keene told a council forum late last year.

There would be a strong recovery from Australia and North American markets this summer.

Germany and other European markets were still a “little soft”, while arrivals from Britain had been steady.

Asian markets were just beginning to gain some traction.

“The challenge for our recovery is to get a higher ratio of visitors returning as ‘holiday visitors’ compared to the very high segment of visiting friends and relatives [VFR] travellers,” said Keene.

A shift to a greater proportion of holiday visitors would help to boost export receipts.

“We do expect this season we’ll see a swing back to more traditiona­l travel trends now the first wave of revenge travel (22-23) has passed.”

Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment figures show internatio­nal visitors spent $9.3 billion in New Zealand in the year to September 2023. That return was behind dairy ($20.3b of exports), but ahead of meat ($8.7b), forestry ($4.8b), and fruit ($3.7b).

At the pre-Christmas TEC symposium, council chairman Scott Mehrtens said members were hearing from offshore trade partners that in some countries, New Zealand needed to increase its marketing investment and training with agents.

“The role of Tourism New Zealand in facilitati­ng these events and getting qualified agents to attend is vital to reposition­ing NZ as a desired bucketlist destinatio­n.”

Tourism New Zealand, the Government’s overseas visitor marketing agency, had its funding cut by the previous Government.

“Tourism New Zealand needs more investment in trade activities and budget, not less. TECNZ is working with TNZ to provide more market insight from partners to improve the country’s profile.”

Inbound tour operators were hearing, “you need to do more for NZ to get a louder voice in the crowded marketplac­e”.

Immigratio­n NZ also needed to speed up visa processing. “We know there are many ITOs [inbound tour operators] and hotel chains having frustratio­ns with last-minute cancellati­ons of groups or group sizes being reduced due to difficulti­es some travellers have with getting their visas processed quick enough for departure,” said Mehrtens.

There were very slow visitor visa processing times for India, Thailand, Indonesia and the Philippine­s.

“ITOs are receiving feedback from their agents that New Zealand is simply becoming too hard and we run the risk of being taken off the sell list of destinatio­ns if we don’t get things sorted quickly.’’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand