Tourism and hospitality data
Tourism and hospitality run on understanding demand, who comes, when, and what they pay. This guide covers tourism and hospitality data and how to source it for planning and revenue management.
Why tourism data matters
Destinations, operators and investors need to understand visitor demand and behaviour. External data fills the gaps that internal booking data cannot, competitor pricing, visitor origin and market context.
What it contains
- Visitor flows: arrivals, origins and aggregated movement.
- Accommodation: occupancy, rates and availability.
- Demand and pricing: booking and price signals.
- Context: events, seasonality and tourism statistics.
Common use cases
Destination management and planning, hotel revenue management and benchmarking, investment and site analysis, and marketing and demand forecasting.
Sourcing considerations
Sources span official tourism statistics, accommodation platforms, aggregated mobility and pricing data. Visitor-flow data derived from devices must be aggregated and anonymised. Comparability and coverage vary, and licensing should be confirmed.
Delivery and governance
Planning uses periodic batches; revenue management wants frequent pricing feeds. Where data derives from individuals, the GDPR applies and aggregation is required.
In a managed model
A managed partner can combine official, platform and aggregated-mobility data into a coherent tourism view, delivered in your format.
Combining official and behavioural sources
Tourism insight blends official statistics (arrivals, accommodation, spend), platform and accommodation data, and aggregated mobility or footfall signals. Each has a different coverage and timeliness profile, and visitor-flow data derived from devices must be aggregated and anonymised to be lawful. The credible picture comes from triangulating sources on consistent geography rather than trusting one.
Cadence by use
Destination planning and investment use periodic, historical data; revenue management wants frequent pricing and demand signals. Where data derives from individuals, the GDPR applies and aggregation is required. Confirming methodology and licensing keeps tourism analysis defensible for planning and policy.
- Tourism data explains demand: who comes, when and what they pay.
- Combine official statistics, accommodation, pricing and aggregated mobility.
- Visitor-flow data from devices must be aggregated and anonymised.
- Use batches for planning and frequent feeds for revenue management.
Sources & further reading
- Eurostat and UN Tourism (UNWTO): tourism statistics.
- National tourism boards and statistical agencies.
- Accommodation and pricing data providers.
- EUR-Lex: Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (GDPR).
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