Regional NSW is welcoming back international tourists for the first time in two years as businesses strive to attract wealthier, "super-luxe" tourists to help them recover from COVID losses.
Key points:
- Tourism operators in regional areas like the Shoalhaven are hoping to draw big spending international tourists to the region
- Luxury travel agents have spent the past few weeks visiting regions which might be of interest to high-end international clients
- Local operators say having another level of tourism would help the regions recover from natural disasters and the pandemic
"Famils" — where luxury international travel agents experience destinations to sell to their wealthy clients overseas — are under way across parts of the Southern Highlands and Shoalhaven for the first time since the pandemic began in 2020.
The clients all have budgets between $10,000 and $20,000 dollars per week.
Bangalay Luxury Villas owner Michelle Bishop said her Shoalhaven Heads business struggled during the pandemic.
Ms Bishop said her customer base was dwindling, despite an influx of domestic tourists when COVID-19 restrictions loosened.
She said she has spent much of the pandemic working on new, luxury experiences for her clients and hoped it would pay off.
"We've had the pent-up demand with domestic visitors but now people can travel overseas and interstate again, we need to backfill that vacancy with the international market," she said.
She said she was looking at a market that was at a "very different level" to the "mass" market.
"They're looking for nature-based or cultural-based tourism experiences," she said.
Experience Nature founder Amanda Fry, who hosted a famil in the Southern Highlands, said the premium and luxury markets were looking for a new playground.
"I think travel has changed forever," Ms Fry said.
"People are choosing one holiday a year and they want a lifetime memory to walk away with."
Delay expected as word spreads
Tourism Australia and Destination NSW are working with operators in destinations such as the Shoalhaven and Southern Highlands to entice more wealthy travellers to spend their money in the regions.
Australia's biggest travel conference, the Australian Tourism Exchange (ATE22), hosted international travel agents — including "super-luxe" agents — this month for the first time in two years.
Tourism Australia managing director Phillipa Harrison hoped it would help the sector recover.
"Despite the challenges of the last two years, there has never been a better time to visit Australia and there are plenty of new and exciting experiences and products to showcase," she said.
She said relationships built at the conference would help to spearhead the tourism industry's recovery.
But she said there would likely be a delay between the conference and "famils", and travellers arriving in the regions.
"I don't think we'll see the flow-on effects until spring just because of the way people are booking," she said.
"They are planning a long way out.
"Singaporeans are ready to travel now, but [with] the European and American markets [there] will be about a 12-month delay before we see them starting to come back."
About 550 international travel agents attended the conference this month from 20 countries, including 72 luxury agents.