This country has beaten New Zealand to be the top travel destination for Australians

Indonesia is Australia's favourite overseas holiday destination, with 1.37 million going there for a holiday, beating New Zealand for the first time since tourism records were kept.

 A man and a woman wearing shorts and light t-shirts are walking past a street shop. A woman dressed in Balinese attire and wearing a face mask is standing outside the shop.

About 1.37 million Australians travelled to Indonesia last year. Source: AAP / Made Nagi/EPA

Key Points
  • Some 1.37 million Australians travelled to Indonesia last year, 86 per cent of them for a holiday.
  • In comparison, 1.26 million travelled to New Zealand.
  • Australian tourism to both countries reached its peak in 2019 before sharply declining during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Indonesia has overtaken New Zealand as Australia's number-one holiday destination for the first time.

About 1.37 million Australians travelled to Indonesia last year — with 86 per cent going for a holiday, the latest ABS statistics say, while 1.26 million travelled to New Zealand.

New Zealand had consistently been the most popular destination since the ABS started recording tourism data nearly 50 years ago, with Indonesia overtaking the US as the runner-up since early 2014.
Australian tourism to both countries reached its peak in 2019 before sharply declining during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Both have shown significant tourism growth since 2020, but while Indonesia has returned to its pre-pandemic peak, New Zealand's growth has slowed since 2022.

New Zealand's post-COVID growth has been hurt by major airlines shrinking their fleets during the pandemic, according to Australian Travel Industry Association chief executive Dean Long.
"(Virgin, Qantas, Air New Zealand's) supply hasn't really changed significantly over that period, so not a real surprise to see those numbers flatlining," he said.

Conversely, Australians may be discovering the cultural and geographical diversity that exists in Indonesia outside Bali, DeluxeLife CEO Simon Mustoe said.

"I think there's a gradual realisation by Australians that there is almost a microcosm of world travel on our doorstep," he said.

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2 min read
Published 15 February 2024 6:17pm
Source: AAP



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