Tourism in Toronto increased for the sixth
consecutive year in 2015 as the destination welcomed a record
14.03 million overnight visitors.
A further 26 million people travelled to Toronto for day trips,
totaling 40.4 million visitors for the year in Canada’s
most-visited destination.
Visitors to Toronto spent $7.2 billion
during their trips, the highest amount of economic activity the
sector has ever generated.
Toronto surpassed 4
million international visitors for the first time in 2015 as
American and overseas travellers continued to visit in greater
numbers. Overnight visitors from the U.S. increased for the fifth
consecutive year to 2.48 million and produced direct spending in
Toronto of $1.32 billion. Overseas travellers, led by China and
the U.K., numbered a record 1.75 million and spent $1.49 billion.
“Our destination has never looked better or been
more attractive to foreign and domestic travellers,” said Johanne
Bélanger, President and CEO of Tourism Toronto. “Every day there
are 110,000 visitors in our destination – 38,000 of them staying
in a hotel. On average there are 6,800 American travellers and a
further 4,800 visitors from other countries in Toronto every
single day, and that speaks to the growing appeal of Toronto on a
global scale. It also speaks to the hard work our team and our
partners do selling and marketing Toronto in key world markets and
the results those efforts are producing.”
While visits to Toronto by Americans have
increased every year since 2010, the 10% growth in 2015 is the
strongest year-on-year improvement yet. Arrivals by
air have driven the growth in U.S. travel to Toronto and now
account for 65% of all trips by Americans to Toronto. In
2015 both air and land crossings surged, resulting in a record
number of American visits. Tourism Toronto has intensified
marketing efforts in the U.S. including the new Toronto Stopover
program for Americans flying overseas via Air Canada, and expanded
marketing partnerships with national and provincial partners.
Apart from the U.S., China remained the top
international market for tourism with 260,400 travellers visiting
Toronto in 2015, an increase of 13% over the prior year.
Other key source countries were the U.K. with 237,800 visitors
(+10%), India (106,700, +13%), Japan (89,740, +3%), Germany, (83,900, -1%), Brazil (58,600, +24%) and Mexico (37,750, +24%).
Hotels in
the Toronto region sold a record 9,647,500 room nights in 2015, an
increase of 2.6%. Over the past three years, increased
tourism to Toronto has added 676,000 more annual hotel room
nights.
There are more than 315,000 people employed in
tourism and hospitality in the Toronto region, illustrating the
significance of the sector to the broader economy and community.
“In addition to hotel stays, visitors spend money
on meals, attractions, ticketed events like theatre, live music
and sports, nightlife, taxis and shopping. Our meeting and events
industry also generates widespread economic activity in businesses
from convention centres and hotels to offsite venues,
transportation companies, audio-visual and staging companies and
many others who benefit every time Toronto hosts a meeting,
conference or event,” said Ms. Bélanger.
Last year
Toronto hosted 725 meetings and events that brought 356,600
delegates to the region and generated spending in Toronto of $417
million. At the same time, Tourism Toronto and its partners booked
751 new meetings and events for future years that will bring
351,900 delegates and $376 million in direct spending to the
region.
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