South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Last-minute ‘workcation­s’ are boosting battered European tourism

- TravelPuls­e

Portions of Europe are experienci­ng a tourism resurgence as remote workers look to take advantage of the time they have remaining away from the office. According to Reuters.com, the lifting of COVID-19-related travel restrictio­ns and cheaper prices have led to a boom for the starved tourism industry in Spain and Portugal’s most popular vacation destinatio­ns.

While the influx of travelers taking workcation­s has brought relief to the tourism-reliant islands, Spain reported the number of internatio­nal arrivals for the first half of 2021 was still around 33% of the 10 million visitors recorded during the same period in 2019.

“We have certainly seen a growth in the ‘digital nomads’ category, (which) has been important to the tourism sector during the pandemic since it contribute­d to long-term stays and local economies,” Jennifer Iduh, the European Union’s head of research for tourism, told Reuters.

Airlines and rental websites are also reporting a spike in bookings, with flights to the Canary Islands up 88% between April and July when compared with the same period in 2020. Bookings for Tenerife doubled, according to low-cost carrier Ryanair.

Property portal Idealista said rental requests for over 15 days in the Canary, Balearic and Madeira islands grew 51% last summer, with the trend continuing into 2021. Tourism officials said an estimated 8,000 remote workers have arrived so far this year and an additional 30,000 remote workers are expected to arrive over the next five years.

Airlines, hotels and rental companies are offering discounted deals to people looking to stay in Europe for several weeks.

 ??  ?? Many travelers are toting their work laptops while they visit places such as Spain and the Canary Islands.
Many travelers are toting their work laptops while they visit places such as Spain and the Canary Islands.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States