US Tourism Faces $12.5 Billion Hit as International Visitor Spending Set to Plunge
The United States travel industry is heading toward its sharpest reversal in international spending in recent memory. The World Travel and Tourism Council (WTTC) is warning that the country could lose $12.5 billion in international visitor spending in 2026, a stark contrast to the global tourism boom that saw worldwide spending rise 6.7% last year.
The numbers are从哪里来的? The WTTC’s latest Economic Impact Research projects that U.S. International visitor spending will grow just 0.7% this year, a fraction of the robust expansion seen elsewhere. That projection stands in stark relief against a 6% drop in foreign visitors to the United States recorded in 2025, even as the global tourism sector generated $11.7 trillion in revenue from more than 1.5 billion travelers.
Europe Bookings Collapse as Travelers Look Elsewhere
One of the clearest indicators of the shift is airline booking data. According to Travel Weekly, bookings from Europe to the U.S. Fell 14.2% year over year, comparing the October 2025 through January 2026 window against the same period a year prior. European travelers, long a bedrock of high-value U.S. Tourism revenue, are reallocating trips to destinations perceived as more welcoming.
Spain and France absorbed much of that redirected demand. France received 105 million visitors in 2025, while more than 96.5 million tourists arrived in Spain, according to WTTC estimates. By comparison, the United States logged just over 68 million international visitors for the entire year.
WTTC interim President and CEO Gloria Guevara said anti-immigration policies and heightened rhetoric around U.S. Entry requirements are pushing tourists toward European markets and Japan, where arrivals are hitting fresh records.
January Data Confirms the Trend Is Accelerating
The problem is not contained to 2025. Forbes reported in February that nearly 5% fewer global visitors arrived in the United States in January 2026 compared to the prior year, a signal that the decline is rolling into the new year rather than stabilizing. The publication dubbed the trend the “Trump Slump,” referencing the policy environment that industry observers say is deterring inbound travel.
Several countries have updated their travel advisories for the United States in recent months. Combined with stricter visa policies and new entry fees, those changes appear to be compounding traveler hesitation, said Larry Yu, professor of hospitality management at George Washington University.
What This Means for Travel Merchants and Operators
For businesses that serve international travelers, the implications are direct. CoStar data shows that hotel revenue per available room fell 0.3% in the United States in 2025, and industry analysts expect similar softness through 2026. While luxury and ultra-luxury properties have held up as a bright spot, the broader hotel sector is under margin pressure as demand softens at the top end of the market.
The tariff environment is adding a layer of uncertainty on the corporate travel side. Jan Freitag, CoStar’s national director for hospitality market analytics, told WTOP that tariff announcements created “a lot of uncertainty infused into corporate America, which directly impacted travel.” Both group and transient corporate demand declined in the wake of those announcements, he said.
Not every segment is struggling equally. Cruises have continued to perform well, with Freitag noting that the all-inclusive value perception is drawing cost-conscious travelers who might otherwise book land-based accommodations. Domestic travel spending has also partially offset the international shortfall, with U.S. Travelers continuing to spend, though increasingly on purpose-driven trips rather than volume-based itineraries.
The Merchant Takeaway
For travel merchants, the data points to a few practical realities. International inbound demand is not going to bounce back on its own without a shift in the policy environment. Businesses that rely on European, Canadian, and Latin American travelers should be planning for a potentially extended soft patch. The domestic “Whycation” trend, where travelers focus on purpose and experience over volume, has a partial counterbalance but may not fully compensate for lost international segments.
The cruise segment continues to be an outlier in positive performance. Operators and travel advisors focused on that channel may find the current environment more favorable than the broader accommodation sector. Meanwhile, the OTA and booking technology layer faces its own pressure as international search demand for U.S. Destinations softens.
WTTC President and CEO Julia Simpson called the trajectory a “wake-up call” in a May 2025 report, urging policy action to reverse the trend. Whether that call is heeded will determine whether the $12.5 billion shortfall is the floor or the beginning of a deeper contraction for the U.S. Travel economy.
Sources: World Travel and Tourism Council (WTTC) Economic Impact Research, Reuters, Travel Weekly, WTOP, CoStar, Forbes, Hotel Online
