

The escalating conflict in the Middle East is carving a deep wound through the region's tourism industry. Daily losses are now estimated to exceed $600 million as security fears and airspace closures drive a sharp decline in international travel.
The World Travel and Tourism Council estimates the crisis is costing the region around $600 million every single day. WTTC President Gloria Guevara warned that even short-lived instability carries serious economic consequences for national economies, private businesses and workers across the travel sector.
The numbers on the ground are stark. More than 80,000 short-term rental bookings in Dubai were canceled within a single week following the escalation of the US-Israeli war on Iran, according to Airbnb data. Aviation analytics firm Cirium reported that airspace closures have stranded roughly 4 million passengers. Airlines have been forced to cancel thousands of flights reroute services and cut schedules as restricted airspace drives up operating costs and reduces capacity.
Jet fuel costs are adding to the pressure. Instability around the Strait of Hormuz has pushed oil prices higher and it makes flights more expensive to operate and forcing carriers to pass those costs on to passengers. Ticket prices have risen and demand has fallen in response.
The Financial Times had projected Middle East tourism spending to reach $207 billion in 2026. The current security environment has sharply undermined that forecast. European estimates suggest losses could surpass 40 billion euros if the conflict continues with international visitor numbers potentially falling 23 to 38 million short of earlier projections.
Key regional hubs including Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Doha and Bahrain have seen notable drops in transit traffic. Routes linking Europe with Asia and the Pacific have been hit particularly hard. Travelers are increasingly redirecting bookings toward more stable destinations in Europe and the Mediterranean.
The damage is spreading beyond the region as rising energy and transport costs strain global travel markets and airline revenues.
Analysts say a recovery is possible if stability returns. The speed of any rebound will depend on government support, targeted security measures and coordinated efforts to rebuild traveler confidence.