Sri Lanka’s tourism sector staged a robust recovery following a turbulent start to the year, outperforming global and regional competitors in May arrivals. Tourism arrivals in May expanded by nearly 10% year-on-year, adding over 10,000 more visitors compared to May 2025. This swift bounce back after Middle East crisis disruptions marks one of the strongest recoveries globally, outstepping regional rivals.
While Sri Lanka secured a 10% increase, the global expansion hovered around just 3%. Tourism revenue remained steady or improved, with individual tourist spending rising from $148 to $153. Although geopolitical tensions caused contractions in March and April, the island nation corrected course much faster than other global destinations.
Authorities continue taking strict legal action against foreigners operating illegal businesses on tourist visas, collaborating with government departments to deport, prosecute, or jail offenders, including those linked to recent cybercrimes.
The annual arrival target sits at 2.8 million. Cumulative figures currently lag by 10% due to the March and April slumps, despite strong growth in January and February. Officials anticipate a sharp surge with a new digital and public relations campaign launching in July, aiming to counter reduced European travel caused by rising prices and hub shortages by targeting alternative markets.
Statistically, January saw 277,327 arrivals, a 9.7% increase, followed by 16.2% growth in February to 279,328. The Middle East crisis triggered a 19.8% drop in March to 183,979 and a 22.3% contraction in April to 135,643. May corrected the trajectory, climbing 9.6% to 145,745. Cumulatively, Sri Lanka welcomed 1,022,021 tourists in the first 5 months of 2026, slightly behind the 1,029,803 recorded during the identical period in 2025.
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