Domestic tourism explained

Domestic tourism is tourism involving residents of one country traveling only within that country.[1] Such a vacation is known as a domestic vacation (British: domestic holiday or holiday at home). For large countries with limited skill in foreign languages, for example Russia, Brazil, Canada, Australia, United States, China and India, domestic tourism plays a very large role in the total tourism sector.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, domestic tourism increased significantly, as countries closed their airports to minimize the spread of COVID-19. Jobs and businesses were lost as a result of the general decline of tourism.[2]

In British English this may also be called a staycation, a portmanteau of "stay" and "vacation", although this is not to be confused the concept of a vacation in which one stays overnight at their own home. The use of the term "staycation" to refer to a domestic holiday was popularized in the late 2000s by its use in the British media in their reporting of the increase in such tourism during the Great Recession[3] [4] when the weakness in the pound made travel abroad more expensive.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Recommendations on Tourism Statistics . Statistical Papers United Nations. 12 July 2010. 1994. 5. 83.
  2. Web site: Stacey . Jane . December 14, 2020 . Rebuilding tourism for the future: COVID-19 policy responses and recovery . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20230523032849/https://www.oecd.org/coronavirus/policy-responses/rebuilding-tourism-for-the-future-covid-19-policy-responses-and-recovery-bced9859/ . May 23, 2023 . OECD.
  3. News: Rallying call for UK 'staycation' . 26 September 2022 . BBC News.
  4. News: UK holidaymakers opt for a 'staycation' in the Britain . 26 September 2022 . The Guardian.