The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Report: Atlanta tourism worth $61B and rising

Demand for Atlanta hotel stays was up 24.2 percent during the past three months compared to the same period of last year.

- BY Michael E. Kanell mkanell@ajc.com

Metro Atlanta’s luster as a tourist destinatio­n has grown a bit shinier this year, according to a study by a company that tracks bookings and searches.

Demand for Atlanta stays was up 24.2 percent during the past three months compared to the same period of last year — after rising 16.9 percent during the first three months of the year, according to Hotels Combined.

The 12-year-old, Australia-based company offers comparativ­e prices for hotel stays around the world. The Atlanta calculatio­n was done at the request of the AJC.

About 51 million people came to visit metro Atlanta last year, according to DK Shifflet and Associates.

Most tourists to Atlanta came from elsewhere in the United States. In fact, the most common state of origin was Georgia, which accounted for about 40 percent of visitors, DK Shifflet said.

The next most common were visitors from Florida, California, Illinois and Michigan.

About 1.2 million visitors came from outside the United States, according to Tourism Economics and the Atlanta Convention and Visitors Bureau.

The United Kingdom sends the most visitors to Atlanta, according to the survey. Behind it: Germany, Australia, Sweden and Norway.

The data seems to hold only hints of an impact on Atlanta so far from the ongoing controvers­y about immigratio­n and the Trump administra­tion restrictio­ns on travel.

Perhaps the only striking change: Nigeria last year ranked fifth for sending visitors from overseas. This year, Nigeria didn’t make the top 20.

But most other countries that were on the list last year, including India, Taiwan, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, are again in the top 20.

Georgia tourism generated $61.1 billion in direct, indirect and “induced” economic impact last year, according to the Georgia Department of Economic Developmen­t.

While no precise statistics are available, a little more than half of tourism’s economic impact in Georgia is probably in metro Atlanta, said Kevin Langston, the state’s deputy commission­er for tourism.

Leisure and hospitalit­y is a sizeable part of the metro Atlanta economy: about 300,000 people work in the sector, up 3.3 percent from a year ago, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

It is difficult to break out the impact of spending by out-oftowners from the spending by full-time residents.

But clearly, many thousands of jobs are accounted for by the food, accommodat­ion and entertainm­ent choices of about 50 million people.

R. Mark Woodworth, senior managing director at CBRE Hotels in Atlanta, said the data he’s seen is somewhat more conservati­ve than that of Hotels Combined. He cited reports that show an uptick of less than 1 percent in demand for lodging here.

“The marketplac­e (for tourists) continues to become more and more competitiv­e,” he said. “We need look no further north than Nashville to see that.”

But Atlanta jobs and income are still seeing solid improvemen­t, he said.

“In summary, the outlook remains bright for Atlanta’s hoteliers. The fundamenta­ls are solid.”

 ?? BEN GRAY / AJC 2015 ?? SkyView Atlanta is one of the city’s many tourist-friendly sites. About 300,000 people work in its hospitalit­y industry, up 3 percent from last year, according to government statistics.
BEN GRAY / AJC 2015 SkyView Atlanta is one of the city’s many tourist-friendly sites. About 300,000 people work in its hospitalit­y industry, up 3 percent from last year, according to government statistics.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States