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The ongoing Israel-Iran conflict is taking its toll on Thailand's tourism sector, with a potential 50% decline in arrivals from five key Middle Eastern markets. The recent turmoil has already led to decreased visits to popular destinations like Phuket as a result of airspace disruptions.

 

Thapanee Kiatphaibool, governor of the Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT), revealed that the Middle East crisis significantly impacts air travel. Airlines such as Emirates, Etihad, and Qatar Airways have rerouted their flights to avoid affected zones. Only Tehran-based Mahan Air has temporarily stopped flights to Bangkok and Phuket as a direct result of Iranian airspace closures, disrupting Iranian travel completely.

 

The Middle Eastern markets of Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria, which represented 7% of June 2024’s Middle Eastern tourist arrivals, face a potential 30-50% drop. June's travel typically sees increased traffic during the Eid al-Adha festival; last year, it attracted 7,165 tourists. This sharp decline could significantly affect anticipated tourist numbers, with projections falling between 3,500 and 5,000 visitors.

 

Thapanee also voiced concerns about the broader impact on Middle Eastern tourists from Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Oman, Kuwait, Qatar, and Bahrain—nations accounting for 80% of the region's market—should they perceive travel as unsafe. Key Thai destinations like Bangkok, Pattaya, Phuket, and Chiang Mai may experience the most significant disruptions in hotel occupancy rates.

 

The tourism situation remains fluid, with the potential for rebounding arrivals in July if tensions ease. Airlines like Royal Jordanian plan to introduce new routes, including a biweekly Amman-Bangkok service launching in August.

 

Nonetheless, a complete recovery hinges on how extensively the conflict inflicts damage and disrupts travel.

 

The TAT aims for a 1.06 million Middle Eastern visitor influx in 2024, a growth of 11% from the previous year, targeting an impressive revenue of 86 billion baht. Whether these ambitions are met will largely depend on resolving the current geopolitical tensions.

 

image.png  Adapted by ASEAN Now from Bangkok Post 2025-06-18

 

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Posted
6 minutes ago, ikke1959 said:

Thailand claims everything to explain why the tourists stay away. Now the Israel Iran war is the reason.. However TAT does apparently not know that almost every tourist is planning his holiday months ahead, and only a few last minute...So this war of 1 week will not have a huge impact on the tourists as they claim, but is due to already existing reasons, as too expensive destination, not welcoming tourists by several outdated rules as vaping, alcoholsales, double standards and pricing, air pollution, dangerous roads etc etc.

Not sure if local residents should be happy or sad ?

Posted
15 minutes ago, Quentin Zen said:

Easier Visas (get it all in country).

The much hyped DTV obviously immature. You are still a tourist who can not open a bank account. Rules differ strongly between consulates.

Those who meet conditions for LTR can go about everywhere in the world.

Much competition. Why Thailand?

 

Need to proof income like a 3 star general for retirement extension. And that for a country with glitzy facade and still 3rd world in many sectors.

 

 

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