Irish tourists pull back on overseas travel

Inbound tourism numbers recorded growth of 11.2% in January

The volume of Irish tourists travelling abroad fell in January fell while inbound tourist numbers increased by more than 11 per cent, according to figures from the Central Statistics Office (CSO).

Some 651,300 people travelled to the Republic in January, an 11.2 per cent increase on the same month in 2018 with British and other European tourists making up the bulk of that.

The number of trips by British tourists increased by 10.4 per cent to 266,700 while trips by residents of other European countries increased by 12.2 per cent to 231,600.

US and Canadian residents also increased their overseas travel in the month with 105,300 trips, up 12.3 per cent. Trips to Ireland from "other areas" increased 9.4 per cent to 47,700.

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And while the Republic witnessed an inbound tourism boom, trips by Irish residents abroad during January, 2019 fell by 2 per cent to 536,900.

The CSO's monthly overseas travel survey is conducted at Dublin, Cork, Shannon, Knock and Kerry airports and Rosslare, Ringaskiddy and Dublin seaports. It doesn't include travel by residents of Northern Ireland into or out of the Republic or domestic travel within the Republic.

In 2018, more than 10.6 million overseas residents took a trip to Ireland while Irish residents took 8.27 million trips abroad.

Peter Hamilton

Peter Hamilton

Peter Hamilton is a contributor to The Irish Times specialising in business