Funding & Investment in Travel
Breckenridge Tourism Office ups efforts to attract tourists as visitation lags behind mountain town competitors

Heading into summer 2025, Breckenridge officials and the local tourism office set a goal to keep people in town after the mid-day Fourth of July parade and turn day visitors into overnight lodgers.
The call to action in part came from Breckenridge businesses. They said town seemingly cleared out the night of the Fourth of July the last few years. Despite beefing up evening entertainment by adding acts like a bicycle-focused circus, overnight lodging numbers were down compared to previous years, according to the Breckenridge Tourism Office.
With summer tourism numbers continuing on an unfavorable trend, the Breckenridge Tourism Office is changing course mid-season in hopes of boosting visitation. It is reallocating $300,000 of its budget to go toward marketing efforts, turning to the business community for suggestions and offering lodging promotion deals.
President Lucy Kay said numbers have been down throughout the summer, and the last several weeks have brought a drop of around 15% in lodging numbers year over year. In terms of Fourth of July numbers, director of operations Bill Wishowski said data indicates lodging numbers were down around 12% on July 4, and down 7% on July 5.
He said a reason as to why this Fourth of July had lower numbers could be because of the day of the week it landed on this year, a Friday. He said last year’s holiday fell on a Thursday, and more people seemed to book a long weekend vacation because of it.
“I’d say business is soft across the mountain communities and resort communities, and it’s still a bit of a hangover from that (COVID-19 pandemic) peak,” Kay said, noting the town saw unprecedented visitation during and after the pandemic.
She said while this may be the case, Breckenridge’s lodging numbers are down compared to its competitors. The town looks at its “competitive set,” which is a group of similar mountain towns like Park City and Steamboat so it can keep tabs on visitation numbers in these areas and gauge overall tourism trends in the mountains.
She said the last several years, starting around the pandemic, Breckenridge was very busy, and the town and tourism office decided to take a step back from introducing initiatives, like adding new entertainment or recreation events, that would draw more visitors.
After a drop in numbers the first half of summer, the tourism office said it wants to refresh those efforts. Breckenridge Tourism Office, historically, hasn’t focused on marketing the Front Range, and that’s changing. It is now doing weekly outreach to the Front Range through its public relations firm, Handlebar PR.
The office also made a Breckenridge Wildflower Watch page on its GoBreck.com website. It is meant to give updates on which wildflowers are in bloom and where to best see them. The page is being advertised to people living on the Front Range.
The Breckenridge Tourism Office also plans to introduce a lodging sweepstakes opportunity where people that book within 10 days of their trip will go into a sweepstakes and have the opportunity to win something like $1,000 in Visa gift cards.
Kay said the office sought business community feedback on how to increase summer visitation, and many local owners thought more live music events could help.
She said officials are hopeful things will pick up in August with the Breckenridge Fine Arts Festival because this year’s event has a new notable addition. Breckenridge will host the United States premiere of artist Daan Roosegaarde’s SPARK exhibit. These firefly-inspired light shows have been done in major cities across the globe like Melbourne and London. The show will cost the town around $300,000, and officials were intending for it to draw national press.
This story was made available via the Colorado News Collaborative. Learn more at:
Funding & Investment in Travel
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Jordan tourism revenues rise 11.9pc in first half

JORDAN’S tourism revenues rose 11.9 per cent year on year in the first half of 2025 to reach $3.67 billion, underscoring the sector’s resilience amid geopolitical tensions in the region.
According to data from the Central Bank of Jordan, the growth came despite a slight setback in June, when monthly revenues fell 3.7pc to $619.2 million, state-run Petra news agency reported.
Despite this, Jordan’s performance reflects a broader tourism surge across the Middle East, with a May release by the World Travel and Tourism Council showing the sector added $341.9bn to gross domestic product and 7.3m jobs in 2024, with projections of $367.3bn and 7.7m jobs in 2025.
Saudi Arabia led the region with a 148pc rise in international tourism revenue in 2024, according to its Ministry of Tourism, while Oman, the UAE, and Qatar continued to attract strong visitor flows through investment, connectivity, and major events.
Citing the central bank data, Petra said: “Tourism revenues from Asian visitors surged by 42.9pc during the first half of the year, while revenues from European tourists increased by 35.6pc, Americans by 25.8pc, Arabs by 11.5pc, and other nationalities by 43.0pc.”
It added: “Conversely, revenues from Jordanian expatriates visiting the kingdom registered a modest decline of 0.8pc over the same period.”
Spending by Jordanians on outbound tourism rose 3.3pc year on year in the first half of 2025, reaching $999.7m, despite a 22.7pc decline in June alone, when spending fell to $195.6m.
This comes on the back of a strong start to 2025, with Jordan welcoming 1.51m visitors in the first quarter – a 13pc increase from the same period last year – while receipts rose 8.85pc to 1.22bn Jordanian dinars ( $1.72bn), according to the Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities’ first-quarter report.
The recovery was further supported by the return of air connectivity, which had nearly disappeared in 2024. New agreements with European carriers expanded the number of low-cost direct routes to 25 this year, including 20 to Amman for the summer and five to Aqaba in the winter. These routes are expected to bring in around 270,000 travellers, the report added.
Looking ahead, the ministry said it is developing a new National Tourism Strategy for 2025–2028, building on the previous plan and aligning with the country’s Economic Modernisation Vision.
The updated roadmap aims to diversify source markets, including China, India, Russia, Africa, and Southeast Asia, and promote high-potential segments such as medical, wellness, faith-based, adventure, and meetings, incentives, conferences, and exhibitions, or MICE, tourism.
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