South Africa’s remarkable Tourism recovery figures revealed
South Africa’s Minister of Tourism, Lindiwe Sisulu has today disclosed the rainbow nation’s impressive tourism recovery figures to the media.
She said, “the South African tourism sector is poised for a tremendous bounce back and positive growth after the first half of the year (2022) figures show a staggering 147% in arrivals reaching an impressive 2,285,746.”
Sisulu was speaking in Johannesburg during a media briefing to present the domestic and international tourism performance for January to June 2022.
“We are particularly pleased that the arrivals from the Americas increased by 331% and represented 128,991 arrivals,” Sisulu said.
According to the Minister, Europe remains our key overseas market, despite external shocks such as the war in Ukraine, yet it “had the most considerable percentage increase in arrivals of 563%.”
However, she maintains that the African land market is our bread and butter, and it also showed impressive growth, dwarfing the Europe and Americas arrivals numbers.
She added: “The African air market brought in 1,634,244 arrivals.”
Tourism’s upward trajectory is overwhelming on the domestic front; between January and June 2022, 15,2 million domestic trips were taken. The Minister described this as “A major win for the tourism sector as this is higher than pre-pandemic levels, indicating that South Africa’s domestic tourism sector has also experienced a revenge travel trend.”
Sisulu said the most heart-warming aspect of the numbers was that the share of holiday trips has increased by 23,8% compared with the same period in 2021, and the average spend has skyrocketed to 28,6%.” As a rule of thumb, you must have “A buoyant domestic market because it is a silver bullet turning locals into storytellers and ambassadors of their country,” the Minister said.
The performance report shows that South Africans spend R 2,850 on their domestic trips. “The biggest driver of domestic travel in the first six months of 2022 was the easing of Covid-19 travel restrictions,” the Minister insisted.
On global airlift, the numbers are also picking up quite nicely. “There is a steady increase in global seat capacity – Air capacity is just 61% of the 2019 levels, with Airlink as the largest airline, which has seen fares up 7%,” she said.
Most remarkable, she said, “75% of seat capacity in South Africa is on Johannesburg routes. Seat capacity on the routes to Johannesburg grew 71% over 2021 – Qatar is the largest source route.”
She said Cape Town has an impressive 1.2 million seats, with Emirates Airways being the largest route.
“And, Durban – King Shaka International Airport is punching above its
weight with a 150% growth from 2021 representing 4% of all seats,” she
said. “The Durban routes grew with Emirates seats up over 400% and was
the most extensive route in the region,” she added.
“Kruger also had 23 100 seats in 2022 (less than 1% of all seats on
international routes). The two airlines active on the route are
Lufthansa from Frankfurt and Airlink from Livingstone,” the tourism
performance report reveals.
The future looks even brighter as a new emerging trend known as forward
bookings takes hold. The Minister disclosed that “forward bookings
increased by 328% (85,960) in August.” Notably, “Between August to
October, there was a 287% (187,667). For August to January 2023, there
was a 227% (294,220) increase in bookings,” she added.
“We will continue to intensify targeted communication on our digital platforms to sell South Africa as a destination of choice, inviting the world to come and “Live Again” with us,” she concluded.