Skift Take

The easing of restrictions has expedited Spain's travel recovery as tourists arrivals inch closer to pre-Covid levels.

Spain received 4 million tourists in March, more than eight times as many as in the same month last year, after most pandemic-related restrictions were lifted, data from the National Institute of Statistics (INE) showed on Thursday.

Foreign tourists spent $5.37 billion while on holiday in the country in March, up from a mere $580 million a year earlier, the data showed.

“Spain closes this first quarter with good data on arrivals and tourist spending, a trend that we hope will intensify in the summer period,” Tourist Minister Reyes Maroto said on her Twitter account.

“Excellent employment figures together with the air capacity recovery make us optimistic,” she added.

The number of tourists flocking to Spain in March was still 1.6 million short of the number who arrived in March 2019 before the Covid-19 pandemic. The amount spent back then was $6.4 billion.

International travel restrictions related to Covid-19 brought Spain’s economically vital tourism sector to its knees in 2020. Tourism accounted for 12 percent of Spain’s economy before the pandemic.

The industry began a gradual recovery in 2021, pausing briefly when the rapid spread of the Omicron variant led to a temporary new round of travel restrictions.

(Reporting by Christina Thykjaer, Editing by Inti Landauro and Jamie Freed)

This article was from Reuters and was legally licensed through the Industry Dive Content Marketplace. Please direct all licensing questions to [email protected].

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Tags: coronavirus recovery, data, europe, spain, tourists, travel recovery, travel restrictions

Photo credit: Spain received 4 million tourists in March. Ввласенко / Wikimedia Commons

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