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Travel Outlook Bright for Santa Barbara

Visit Santa Barbara’s event highlights cruise ships and millennials.

Travel Outlook Bright for Santa Barbara
<em>Gaviota: The End of Southern California</em>

The tourism industry is looking bright for Santa Barbara in the coming year, said speakers at the 2017 Travel Outlook, a tourism and hospitality industry event presented by Visit Santa Barbara (VSB) on Friday, January 20, 2017 at the Cabrillo Arts Pavilion. On an unusually rainy day, when flash flood warnings momentarily disrupted the proceedings, more than 100 state and local hospitality industry officials gathered to discuss the future of South Coast tourism for the coming year.

VSB President and CEO Kathy Janega-Dykes provided an update on the new Santa Barbara South Coast Visitor Profile Study and highlighted results from the 2016 Cruise Ship Economic Impact Study. Janega-Dykes pointed to MOXI - The Wolf Museum of Exploration + Innovation as a major new draw for visitors. One in three visitors to S.B. stayed overnight, while day-trippers still represented the vast majority at 67.6% of visitors; the average visitor made an average of six trips over the course of a year. LA-Riverside-Orange County remains the top MSA of residence, while the top internaitonal markets included the U.K. and Canada. Janega-Dykes showed VSB’s recent See (Yourself In) Santa Barbara campaign as one of the ways the city is reaching out to domestic markets: to celebrate nonstop flights to SBA, a sky blue VW bus visited the Dallas-Fort Worth area, replete with photo booth and surf board, to encourage flights westward.

The cruise ship industry, meanwhile, has grown dramatically over the last few years. In 2016, 29 cruise ships brought 80,831 passengers to S.B., contributing $3.9 million to the local economy, up 61% from 2013. Almost half of all passengers said they are likely to return within one to two years, including nearly 8% who are likely to return within 1 to 2 months.