Bristol鈥檚 city centre is seeing "strong signs" of recovery following the Covid pandemic, according to new research. Hundreds of millions of pounds were spent in the city in the first six months of 2022, new data by three of Bristol鈥檚 business improvement districts (BIDs) has found.

The research, carried out by Bristol City Centre BID, Redcliffe and Temple BID, and Broadmead BID, found there was Visa spend of 拢274m across businesses in the BS1, BS2 and BS8 areas in the six months to June 30.

There was 拢131.1m spent in central Bristol in the first quarter, rising 9% to 拢142.7m in the second - an increase of 16% compared to the same trading period in 2021.

The Visa spend data is sourced from companies such as Virgin Media O2 and Visa, with the analysis used by the BIDs to understand how people are choosing to shop, eat, drink and experience the city in 2022.

The research found that people were spending most at restaurants, pubs and clubs (拢76m) in the first half of the year, followed by on clothing (拢46m) and at supermarkets (拢40m). There was also 拢25m spent on the high street and 拢15m spent on hotels and accommodation.

The night-time economy sector (businesses operating between 6pm and 6am) also saw a significant boost across the first half of 2022 with a total spend of 拢39.5m. The BIDs said a "key driver" for the increase was the return of Bristol Light Festival, which brought an extra 拢3.4m of revenue to city centre businesses and 170,000 visitors to the event across its duration.

Businesses in the city centre also benefitted from online sales of 拢161m over the first quarter, the research found, followed by a further 拢146m in the second. However, there was a decrease of 10% between the two quarters, showing a shift towards more people shopping in store rather than online.

The return of international visitors also had a "huge impact" on Bristol's economy and recovery, the BIDs said. A total of 拢53.4m was spent across the first six months of the year, with visitors from the US accounting for the highest international spend in the city.

Steve Bluff, head of Redcliffe and Temple BID, said despite the increase in spend in central Bristol, there was "still more" work to be done. He pointed out the amount of money spent in Bristol in the second quarter of 2022 was still 拢50m less than in the same quarter in 2019.

He said: "If the city is to fully rebound and return to the levels seen before the pandemic then businesses need continued support through local, international, and online spend.鈥

Vicky Lee, head of Bristol City Centre BID, said the data showed Bristol was "heading in the right direction". She added: "Whilst it is likely consumer鈥檚 disposable income may have reduced, the importance of smaller 鈥榩ick me up鈥 purchases and experiences such as shopping, meals out with friends and family and a night out in the city, are still being high on people鈥檚 agenda."

Last month, Bristol City Centre BID unveiled detailed plans to improve safety and boost tourism in central Bristol over the next five years. The BID first outlined its proposals earlier in July - ahead of a ballot later this year to decide whether to extend its term to 2027.

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