COAST PROVING A HOTSPOT FOR AUSSIES

COAST PROVING A HOTSPOT FOR AUSSIES

TRAVELLERS from across Australia are increasingly choosing the Gold Coast as their holiday destination, with new figures showing the city welcomed an additional 225,000 domestic visitors in 2015.

This follows a surge in international tourism spending on the Gold Coast, which jumped 20 per cent to $1.23 billion in 2015, according to Tourism Research Australia.  

Together, domestic and international visitor expenditure on the Gold Coast reached more than $4.9 billion, up 6 per cent from a year before.

"There's no doubt in my mind that the Gold Coast has experienced a revival over the last 12 months," says Gold Coast Tourism CEO, Martin Winter.

"The city is in a period of physical and cultural transformation, driven by significant tourism investment and a vibrant new generation keen to embrace and share the city's iconic coastal lifestyle and playful image.

"We are achieving record-breaking international visitor expenditure, and today's results show a 7 per cent growth in domestic overnight visitors and 19 per cent growth in daytrips to the Gold Coast."

In 2015, there were 3.7 million overnight visitors to the Gold Coast and 8.2 million daytrips to the city.

The Gold Coast welcomed more overnight visitors from core capital city markets of Brisbane (up 7 per cent), Sydney (up 10 per cent) and Melbourne (up 4 per cent).

"It's our lifestyle that continues to draw visitors from across Australia and indeed the world," says Winter.

"In addition to our well established attractions, today, you can go stand up paddle boarding or join a yoga class on the beach, grab a great coffee from a funky café and be at your desk by 9am.

"There aren't too many cities in Australia where that's possible."

Meanwhile, over the past three years, international visitor expenditure has jumped 47 per cent, according to Winter.

This is largely due to a surge in US visitors (up 25 per cent to 35,000), South Korea visitors (up 22 per cent to 24,000) and Chinese visitors, which most notably saw an extra 40,000 visitors headed for the Gold Coast totalling 242,000 extra Chinese tourists.

"While we've seen significant growth in international visitors, the Australian market remains a critical ingredient for the continued success of our industry," says Winter.

Get our daily business news

Sign up to our free email news updates.

Please tick to verify that you are not a robot

 

Help us deliver quality journalism to you.
As a free and independent news site providing daily updates
during a period of unprecedented challenges for businesses everywhere
we call on your support

Australian Millennial managers look to offshoring to solve global talent shortage problem
Partner Content
New research reveals that more than half of Australia’s next-gen leaders are cons...
Cloudstaff
Advertisement

Related Stories

Bond University reboots development plans with bid for student accommodation towers

Bond University reboots development plans with bid for student accommodation towers

The housing shortage on the Gold Coast has led Bond University to r...

Meriton guest database "not compromised" in data hack

Meriton guest database "not compromised" in data hack

Billionaire Harry Triguboff's hotel and property empire Meriton...

Sydney startup Vow Food creates the world’s first lab-grown meat made from extinct mammoth

Sydney startup Vow Food creates the world’s first lab-grown meat made from extinct mammoth

The creation of a mammoth meatball has triggered global discussion ...

Healius takes ‘misleading’ Australian Clinical Labs proposal to Takeovers Panel

Healius takes ‘misleading’ Australian Clinical Labs proposal to Takeovers Panel

The conditions of a $1.58 billion bid from Australian Clinical Labs...