Beyond one province: South African Tourism patterns show that 91pc travel to just one province

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South African Tourism Departure Survey 2025 revealed that 91pc of international visitors travelled to only one province.

Multi-province travellers stayed longer at 20 days versus 14 days for single-province visitors. Multi-province spend reached nearly three times higher per trip. Holiday travellers drove geographic spread, while visiting friends and relatives remained concentrated.

Opportunities existed to promote under-visited regions through improved connectivity and trade packaging.

Beyond One Province: Rethinking Geographic Spread and Travel Patterns in South Africa

Provincial distribution, or geographic spread, remains one of the most important levers for sustainable tourism growth, both in South Africa and globally. At its core, provincial tourism encourages travellers to explore multiple regions within a country, thereby benefiting the country more broadly. When visitors disperse geographically, economic value flows into more communities, supports more jobs, and strengthens regional development.

According to South African Tourism’s Departure Survey (2025), South Africa faces a stark reality: 91pc of international travellers visit only one province, while just 9pc travel to more than one province. As a result, most tourism value remains concentrated in a limited number of areas, leaving substantial opportunities untapped across the rest of the country.

Uneven Spread, Unequal Opportunity

The data reveal significant regional variation. South American travellers perform best in provincial spread, with 53pc visiting more than one province. Australasia follows at 37pc, North America at 35pc, and key European markets such as France and Germany range from 34pc to 36pc. At the country level, Brazil leads with 55.2pc, followed by Canada at 41.6pc and Australia at 37pc. In contrast, Africa remains highly concentrated, with 97pc of travellers visiting only one province. This pattern is driven particularly by African land markets, where only 2.3pc travel to more than one province, compared with 11pc in African air markets. 

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The primary driver of single-province travel is visiting friends and relatives (59pc), whereas multi-province travel is largely driven by holidays (55pc). The difference between these two travel patterns is economically significant. Multi-province travellers stay an average of 20 days, compared with 14 days for single-province travellers. Their average spend is approximately R26,000 per trip, nearly three times that of those who remain in one province (R8,800). They are significantly more likely to visit natural attractions (63pc versus 9pc), participate in wildlife experiences (59pc), and book fully inclusive packages (35pc compared to 21pc). Multi-province travellers are also more likely to be first-time visitors, while single-province travellers tend to be repeat visitors.

Age and travel party composition further distinguish the behavioral segments. Travellers visiting multiple provinces skew older, with 43pc over age 40, and are more likely to travel as couples or with friends. Those visiting only one province are predominantly younger and travel alone, with a strong orientation toward socializing and visiting friends and relatives.

The Experience Gap

Travellers who move between provinces have a richer, more diverse journey. As one traveller’s insight captures:

Travelling across provinces is not just about covering distance; it’s about expanding your experience, finding exceptional hospitality, and enjoying outstanding service wherever you go. Each new province offers exceptional opportunities and positive memories waiting to be discovered!” – US Traveller, 2025.

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Multi-province travel is strongly correlated with deeper engagement, greater satisfaction, and more varied consumption of tourism products. It also offers a solution to over-concentration in specific nodes, helping mitigate the risks of over-tourism while unlocking the potential of outlying regions.

South Africa’s scenic beauty, cultural depth, wildlife, and heritage experiences are not confined to one province. They are spread across the country. Yet most travellers experience only a fraction of what is available.

A Collective Industry Shift

Shifting provincial distribution requires more than intention; it demands coordinated industry action. Travellers need clearer, more compelling information about what to experience in different provinces, including where to stay, what activities are available, and practical guidance on safety and logistics. Rich imagery and video content are essential to inspire travel beyond familiar routes.

Trusted voices also matter. Trusted Influencers, authentic storytelling, and credible reviews can reduce perceived risk and increase confidence in exploring lesser-known areas. Connectivity messaging must be strengthened to demonstrate that South Africa is easy to navigate, whether by land, water, or air, and that combining provinces is practical and can be done seamlessly to unlock the joy of a full experience of South Africa.

The tourism trade plays a pivotal role. Education and enablement are critical to help trade partners confidently package and sell multi-province itineraries. The profitability of extended itineraries must be clearly demonstrated. At international trade shows and marketing platforms, all provinces should be represented, and off-the-beaten-track experiences should be positioned as compelling differentiators rather than add-ons.

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Hosting strategies continue to evolve. When engaging trade and media, curated itineraries that span multiple provinces should become the norm, reinforcing the message that South Africa is best experienced as a connected journey rather than a single stop.

Provincial Distribution is a Strategic Imperative

Provincial distribution is not merely a performance indicator. It is a strategic imperative tied directly to economic inclusion, sustainability, and the long-term competitiveness of destinations and countries.

When travellers move, they stay longer. The longer they stay, the more they spend. The more they spend, the more communities benefit. At the same time, pressure on saturated destinations is reduced, and the country’s full diversity is brought to life.

With 91pc of travellers still visiting only one province, the opportunity is undeniable. South Africa has the assets, the stories, and the diversity. What remains is collective execution.

Provincial spread is not just about geography. It is about unlocking the full value of the destination and the country.

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