Data from Africanews indicates that Africa welcomed 81 million international tourists in 2025, an 8% increase from 2024. Morocco and Tunisia were particularly strong performers, benefitting from renewed marketing campaigns, enhanced connectivity, and improved tourism infrastructure. Analysts suggest this growth highlights the continent’s expanding role in global tourism markets, with both leisure and business travel seeing notable upticks.
The growth in arrivals is translating into higher revenue for African economies. The World Travel & Tourism Council estimates that tourism contributed significantly to GDP in top-performing nations, while also creating employment opportunities in hospitality, transport, and service sectors. Morocco, for instance, has seen rising foreign exchange earnings from tourism, boosting its broader trade and investment profile. Tunisia’s revival is tied to both government incentives and private-sector investment in hotel upgrades and cultural attractions.
Enhanced airport capacity, better visa facilitation, and upgraded transport networks are key factors supporting Africa’s tourism surge. Regional cooperation, through bodies like the COMESA, also enables smoother cross-border travel. Furthermore, partnerships with Asia and the Gulf region provide additional visitor flows, with airlines expanding routes to major African hubs. Travel experts note that improved connectivity is critical for sustaining long-term growth and diversifying source markets.
Tourism authorities across the continent are optimistic about 2026, projecting continued growth as global travel rebounds further. Investment in eco-tourism, cultural heritage, and luxury resorts is expected to drive both high-value and mass tourism segments. African destinations are positioning themselves strategically to attract visitors from Asia via FurtherAsia and the Gulf region through FurtherArabia, enhancing cross-continental economic linkages and strengthening tourism’s contribution to sustainable development.
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