The US$50 Billion Tourism Reallocation | Living Lab
Winners and losers in the $50 Billion US Tourism decline
As America Turns Inward, Five Economies Are Capturing the Shift
HOW THE WORLD'S FASTEST-GROWING VISITOR ECONOMIES ARE ABSORBING US$50 BILLION US TOURISM DECLINE
International visitors to the United States fell 4.2% in 2025 (the first annual decline since the pandemic) while worldwide travel grew 4%. The US Travel Association estimates the gap amounts to roughly 11 million fewer visitors and US$50bn in forgone spending. That capital did not disappear. It moved.
- US$50bn — estimated lost international visitor spending in the US in 2025
- 11 million — fewer international visitors year on year
- 75 countries — where US visa issuance was suspended
- -9.4% — Living Lab’s revised 2025 forecast, down from +9%
For tourism ministries and convention bureaux watching from Riyadh, Doha, Dubai, Mexico City and Ottawa, the question is no longer whether a reallocation is under way. It is how much of that displaced demand they can convert into durable economic gain and how fast they can build the case to capture it.
THE GREAT REBALANCING. WHY THIS DISPLACEMENT IS STRUCTURAL
The causes are not seasonal. The US administration suspended visa issuance to 75 countries, expanded border device searches by 18% and introduced tariff measures that dampened both sentiment and logistics. Western European overnight visits fell 17% in March alone. Canadian arrivals declined 10.2% over the full year. Year-on-year RevPAR growth in US hotels has been negative every month since April.
Living Lab had forecast a 9% rise in US international arrivals for 2025. We revised our outlook to a 9.4% decline. The reversal is among the sharpest single-year forecast corrections in the platform’s history. For competing destinations, this is not a blip. It is a structural opportunity.
Understand Where the Spending Is Going
Five economies are absorbing displaced demand, each from a different position of strength.
Saudi Arabia: US$81bn in tourism spending (+6%)
- 122 million visitors in 2025, a 5% annual increase
- UNWTO ranked the Kingdom first globally for tourism revenue growth in Q1 2025
- International visitor spending rose 9.7% to US$13.2bn in Q1 alone
- Entertainment, conferences and exhibitions now contribute materially beyond the religious tourism base
- Vision 2030 target: 150 million annual visitors by the end of the decade
UAE: US$62bn in forecast international visitor spending
- Dubai welcomed 9.88 million overnight visitors in H1 2025, up 6%
- Hotel occupancy at 80.6%
- WTTC forecasts UAE international visitor spending at a record AED 228.5bn for the full year, 37% above the 2019 peak
- Tourism contributes nearly 13% of UAE GDP
Qatar: more than one million MICE business visitors
- 5.1 million visitors in 2025, up 3.7%
- 14 international conference bids secured through 2027
- Accommodation revenue rose 12% to QAR 8.3bn
- MICE sector valued at US$2.2bn, forecast to reach US$4.7bn by 2032
- More than 600 events delivered through the Qatar Calendar
Mexico: US$31.7bn in tourism revenue (+4.9%)
- 47.8 million international tourists in 2025, a record year
- Canadian air arrivals rose 11.4% as travellers redirected from the US
- Revenue up 42.4% versus 2019
- 2026 FIFA World Cup matches in Mexico City, Monterrey and Guadalajara will accelerate the pipeline
Canada: C$59bn record summer
- Summer tourism revenue (May–August) up 6% year on year
- Overseas visitor spending surged 10.4%
- Domestic tourism up 7% as Canadians chose to stay home
- Canadian trips to the US fell 29.7% in August 2025
Actionable Takeaway
The displacement is not evenly distributed. Gulf economies are winning on MICE and high-yield leisure. Mexico is capturing redirected North American demand. Canada is benefiting from a patriotic domestic surge. The destinations that will gain most are those that can identify which segments of the US$50bn are actually contestable for them: by sector, origin market and event type.
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