stringtranslate.com

Tourism in Portugal

Lisbon, Portugal's capital.
Porto, Portugal's fourth largest municipality
The Marinha Beach in Lagoa is considered by the Michelin Guide as one of the 10 most beautiful beaches in Europe and as one of the 100 most beautiful beaches in the world. The Algarve region leads in overnight stays.
A view of Óbidos.
Panoramic view of Nazaré and its beach.
Shrine of Our Lady of Fátima.
University of Coimbra, one of the oldest universities in the world.
Mondego River in Coimbra.
Pena National Palace in Sintra, an UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Monserrate Palace in Sintra
Pico, Azores, besides being the highest mountain in Portugal, it is a wine region whose landscape is protected as world heritage.
Aveiro is known as the "Portuguese Venice".
The Douro river in Northern Portugal.

Tourism in Portugal serves millions of international and domestic tourists. Tourists visit to see cities, historic landmarks, enjoy beaches, or religious sites. As of 2023, Portugal had 26.5 million international visitors. In addition, there were also 11 million trips made by Portuguese residents including overnight stays at local hotels.[1][2]

Dolphins in Arrábida natural reserve

The most popular destinations are Lisbon, Porto, the Algarve, the Portuguese Riviera, Madeira, Sintra, Óbidos, Nazaré, Fátima, Braga, Guimarães and Coimbra. The most popular with internationals were Lisbon region, the Algarve, the West and Tagus Valley region (Óbidos, Nazaré, Fátima), Northern Portugal (Porto, Braga and Guimarães) and Coimbra. National tourists prefer the Algarve and Northern Portugal, followed by Central region of Portugal.[3]

Statistics

In 2006, the country was visited by 7 million tourists, three million of which came from Spain.[4] By 2023, the country was visited by 26.5 million international tourists.[5]

In 2016, and compared to 2015, most tourists staying in hotels were attracted to Lisbon (6.3 million, up from 5.8), Porto and Northern Portugal (4.4 million, up from 3.9), the Algarve (4.2 million, up from 3.8), Central Portugal (3.2 million, up from 2.9 million), Madeira (1.5 million, up from 1.3), Alentejo (1.2 million, up from 1.1), and the Azores (0.5 million, up from 0.4). The Algarve and Lisbon lead in overnight stays.[6] In 2016, overnight stays grew significantly in other regions: the Azores (+21.1%), Northern Portugal (+14.4%), Alentejo (+12%), Central Portugal (+11.8%), and Madeira (+10.9%).[7][8]

The following table presents the nationality of the largest demographic of tourists from 2017 to 2023:[2][1][9]

In 2016, accounting international tourists, the most popular regions were Lisbon (4.4 million), Algarve (3 million), Northern Portugal (2.1 million), Central Portugal (1.2), Madeira (1.2), Alentejo 370,000 and the Azores. For national tourists the most popular regions were Northern Portugal (2.3), Central Portugal (2.0), Lisbon (1.9), the Algarve (1.2), Alentejo (0.8), Madeira (0.29), and the Azores (0.27).[8]

The following table presents the nationality of the largest demographic of tourists by region in 2019:[3]

Lisbon is, with Barcelona, one of the European cities leading in overnight stays.[10] The urban areas of Porto and Northern Portugal, north of Douro River surpassed Madeira, in 2010, and the Algarve, in 2015, and became the second most visited destination in Portugal. In 2015, most tourists were Europeans, but also from the Americas and Asia. Sleeping in the country's hotels, the most numerous are the British, Spanish, French, Germans, Brazilians, the Dutch, Americans, Italians, and the Japanese, which not only want the sun and the beach, but mostly cultural ones, city breaks, gastronomy, nautical tourism, or business traveling.

Portugal won 14 "Oscars" of the tourism. The national tourism had 77 nominations and won a total of 14 awards in more than 10 European categories, surpassing Spain or Italy, at the gala of the World Travel Awards 2015, whose ceremony took place in Sardinia, Italy. CNN compared Lisbon and Porto head-to-head in order to find who has the best food, culture, old cafés and boutiques, nightlife, and the best beaches.[11]

Travel guide giants Lonely Planet have designated Portugal as one of the top 3 countries to visit in 2018.[12]

Tourism regions

Tourist hotspots in Portugal are Lisbon, Porto, the Algarve, Madeira, Sintra, Óbidos, Fátima, Coimbra and Azores, but the Portuguese government is currently developing new destinations: the Douro Valley, Porto Santo Island, and Alentejo.

Tourist regions

The main tourist regions can be broken-down into:[citation needed]

Other tourist regions include Douro Sul, Templários, Dão-Lafões, Costa do Sol, Costa Azul, Planície Dourada, that are unknown to many tourists or visitors.

Most of these regions are grouped in tourism reference areas, which continue to be in a state of reorganization and evolution, some based on the traditional regions of Portugal: the Costa Verde (Green Coast); Costa da Prata (Silver Coast); Costa de Lisboa (Lisbon Coast); Montanhas (Mountains); Planícies (Plains); Algarve; and the islands of the archipelagos of Madeira and the Azores. All these regions are grouped in tourism reference areas, which are widely known because these are the traditional regions:[citation needed]

Protected areas

Maronesa in Alvão Natural Park
Berlengas fort in Berlengas Islands
Ribeiro do Cavalo beach in Arrábida Natural Park
Cliff in Berlengas Islands

The following table presents the number of visitors who contacted each of the protected areas of Portugal, according to ICNF[13]

UNESCO World Heritage sites

Souvenirs

The Rooster of Barcelos is bought by many tourists as a souvenir. The legend of the Rooster of Barcelos tells the story of a dead rooster's miraculous intervention in proving the innocence of a man who had been falsely accused and sentenced to death. The story is associated with the 17th-century calvary that is part of the collection of the Archeological Museum located in Paço dos Condes, a gothic-style palace in Barcelos, a city in the Braga District of northwest Portugal.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "ESTATÍSTICAS DO TURISMO - INE".
  2. ^ a b "Guests (No.) in tourist accommodation establishments by Geographic localization (NUTS - 2013) and Place of residence (Country - short list); Annual (1)".
  3. ^ a b "Data and Resources". travelbi.turismodeportugal.pt. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
  4. ^ Três milhões de espanhóis visitaram Portugal em 2006[permanent dead link]. January 31, 2007. Público.
  5. ^ LCG. "TravelBI by Turismo de Portugal - Portugal atinge 26,5 milhões de turistas não residentes | 2023". travelbi.turismodeportugal.pt (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2024-07-16.
  6. ^ Estatísticas do Turismo - 2015 - INE
  7. ^ Alojamento turístico acelera crescimento - 2016 - INE
  8. ^ a b Estatísticas do Turismo - 2016 - INE
  9. ^ "ETurismo_2023".
  10. ^ DN Online: Cidades atraem mais turistas do que os destinos sol e mar Archived 2007-02-18 at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ Paul Ames, CNN (27 July 2017). "Porto vs. Lisbon: 8 reasons Porto is cooler". {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  12. ^ "Lonely Planet Best in Travel 2018: Top Countries".
  13. ^ "ICNF".

External links