Friday, December 26, 2025

Foreign tourism up 1.6% in first 10 months; October saw bigger increase

The number of international tourists arriving by air increased 1.6% in the first 10 months of the year compared to the same period of 2018, according to Tourism Secretary Miguel Torruco Marqués.

He told reporters that 15.52 million foreign visitors entered the country via the nation’s airports between January and October. Of that number, 55.5% came from the United States, 11.4% from Canada, 3.2% from the United Kingdom, 3.1% from Colombia and 2.2% from Argentina, he said.

Tourists from the five nations represent just over three-quarters of all visitors who arrived in Mexico by air this year. Their numbers increased 0.3% compared to the first 10 months of 2018.

Torruco said that air arrivals from Peru recorded the biggest growth between January and October, increasing by 14.7%. France, Colombia and Canada followed, with air arrivals up by 9.1%, 7.3% and 7% respectively.

Cancún was the busiest airport for foreign arrivals, receiving 41.7% of all international visitors, followed by Mexico City with 26.6%; Los Cabos with 9.3%; Puerto Vallarta with 7.7%; and Guadalajara with 5.8%. More than 90% of foreign visitors flew into those five airports.

October was a particularly good month for international tourist numbers although individual visitors spent less on average while in the country than a year earlier. More than 1.63 million foreign visitors came to Mexico by air or land, a 4.4% increase compared to October 2018 and 27.3% more than in September this year.

Of that number, 83% of tourists arrived by air and 17% crossed into the country via Mexico’s borders with the United States, Guatemala and Belize, according to data from the national statistics agency, Inegi.

The tourists collectively spent US $1.33 billion while in the country, or an average of $816.90 each. The latter figure represents a 4.3% decline compared to October 2018 when tourists spent US $853 each on average. However, as a result of the higher visitor numbers, overall expenditure was equal to that of a year earlier.

The number of people who crossed into Mexico for reasons other than tourism, such as to access medical and dental services in northern border cities, also increased in October. Just over 1.99 million “border tourists” came to Mexico, a 30.8% increase compared to October last year.

They spent US $113 million while in the country, a 24.6% increase over expenditure in October 2018.

Source: 24 Horas (sp), El Economista (sp) 

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Riders wait as an orange Mexico City Metro train pulls into the station

The Metro in 2025: The art, commerce and commuters who defined Mexico City’s subway this year

0
Chief staff writer Peter Davies' 2025 deep dive into the Metro highlights the music, street art, archaeological relics and myriad products for sale beneth the streets of Mexico City.
huachicol

Mexico’s year in review: The 10 biggest news and politics stories of 2025

1
The past year came with no shortage of challenges and contrasts for Mexico, from major floods and record rain to turf wars and trade discussions. These are the 10 stories that most impacted the national dialogue in 2025.
Galveston patrol car

At least 5 dead after Mexican Navy plane on medical mission crashes near Galveston

0
Among the passengers was a child burn victim who was being transported to a Texas hospital by a humanitarian group. The preliminary toll is five dead, one missing and two rescued.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity