º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Richard III, Bradgate Park and National Space Centre help Leicestershire tourism sector pass pre-Covid levels

Tourism said to be worth £2.07 billion to the city and county last year

Bennetts British Superbikes at Donington Park this summer (Image: Michael Hallam)

Attractions such as Bradgate Park, the Richard III Visitor Centre and National Space Centre helped bring in 30.5 million visitors to Leicester and Leicestershire last year – up almost 2.4 million on the year before.

The region’s list of national attractions as well as its as its museums, festivals, sporting venues and hotels, helped visitor numbers in Leicester and Leicestershire pass pre-Covid levels last year.

New figures suggest the city saw more than 9.91 million visitors while more than 20.6 million visitors came to the county in 2022.

Marketing company Visit Leicester said the tourism economy was worth £2.07 billion to the city and county last year, up £440 million on 2021 and £108 million up on pre-pandemic figure of £1.962 billion.

Visit Leicester said the rate of growth was bigger than Nottingham and Nottinghamshire, at 27.1 per cent year-on-year – compared to 15.6 per cent growth for neighbouring county and its main city.

The new figures also show that the number of tourism-related jobs is on the rise, with more than 21,000 people now employed in the sector across the city and the county – up 20 per cent.

Non-serviced accommodation including self-catering, camping and glamping, has surpassed pre-pandemic 2019 figures, showing the strongest recovery in the accommodation market with an economic impact of £95.12 million to the region.

The tourism figures for Leicester and Leicestershire are taken from the 2022 Scarborough Tourism Economic Activity Monitor (STEAM) survey.