Overseas travel and tourism: April 2022 provisional results

Visits to the UK by overseas residents, visits abroad by UK residents and spending by travellers, using provisional passenger traffic data.

This has been superseded. View corrected version

Contact:
Email Angie Osborn

Release date:
24 June 2022

Next release:
To be announced

1. Main Points

  • There were 2.1 million visits to the UK by overseas visitors in April 2022, 27 times more than in April 2021 when many travel restrictions were in place.

  • Spending by overseas residents in April 2022 in the UK was £1.7 billion, 14 times more than in April 2021.

  • Visits to the UK in April 2022 were still down significantly on pre-coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic levels; visits were down 33% from 3.2 million in April 2019.

  • UK residents made 5.6 million visits overseas in April 2022, 20 times more than in April 2021.

  • UK residents spent £4.1 billion while overseas in April 2022; this was 20 times more than in April 2021.

  • In April 2022 UK residents’ visits overseas had not yet at the level seen in April 2019; there were 5.6 million visits overseas in April 2022 compared with 8.4 million in April 2019 (33% decrease).

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The estimates provided for 2022 should be treated with caution as the numbers are smaller than pre-coronavirus pandemic years. The data still exclude the EuroTunnel as the Office for National Statistics (ONS) was unable to interview at this site. No estimates are included for any travel across the Irish border.

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4. Overseas travel and tourism data

Overseas travel and tourism monthly
Dataset | Released 24 June 2022 
Monthly estimates of overseas residents' visits and spending in the UK and UK residents' visits and spend abroad from the International Passenger Survey 

Overseas travel and tourism time series
Dataset | Released 24 June 2022 
Monthly, quarterly and Annual estimates of overseas residents' visits and spending in the UK and UK residents' visits and spend abroad from the International Passenger Survey 

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5. Glossary

Visits

The figures relate to the number of completed visits, not the number of visitors. Anyone entering or leaving more than once in the same period is counted on each visit.

Day visits

Trips that do not involve an overnight stay abroad by UK residents, as well as day trips to the UK by overseas residents, are included in the total figures for visits and expenditure. However, figures presented at lower levels of geography relate to overnight stays only.

Overseas visitor

A person who, being permanently resident in a country outside the UK, visits the UK for a period of less than 12 months. UK citizens resident overseas for 12 months or more coming home on leave are included in this category. Visits abroad are visits for a period of less than 12 months by people permanently resident in the UK (who may be of foreign nationality).

Visiting multiple countries

When a resident of the UK has visited more than one country, expenditure and stay are allocated to the country stayed in for the longest time.

Miscellaneous visits

Visits for miscellaneous purposes include those for study, to attend sporting events, for shopping, health, religious, or for other purposes, together with visits for more than one purpose when none predominates (for example, visits both on business and on holiday). Overseas visitors staying overnight in the UK on their way to other destinations are also included in miscellaneous purposes.

Earnings and expenditure

Earnings refer to spending in the UK by overseas residents, whereas expenditure refers to spending abroad by UK residents.

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6. Measuring the data

International Passenger Survey (IPS) data are collected by a team of over 200 interviewers who are recruited and trained specifically to work on the IPS. They carry out interviews at air and sea ports, on board vessels leaving or returning to the UK, or on board the Eurotunnel Trains. Interviews are carried out on all days of the year, apart from Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, Boxing Day and New Year’s Day.

We have made methodological improvements to the travel and tourism estimates from the IPS. These relate to the survey’s weighting process and were used to produce the data presented in this bulletin. The improvements were introduced in our Travel trends: 2019 article and are described in Section 5: Improved methodology for the estimates. A detailed technical paper will be published in due course, comprehensively setting out the changes. These changes affect only travel and tourism and not estimates of long-term international migration.

The new method was used to produce final results for 2019 and a revised series for 2009 to 2018. The effects of the new method, and how these differ from the old, are presented in Section 6: Impacts of the new IPS methodology of the Travel trends: 2019 article.

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7. Data sources and quality 

Methods used to produce these estimates 

Apart from the time when the survey was not running (16 March 2020 to 18 January 2021) figures shown are produced from results of the International Passenger Survey. These results do not include any travel via the Channel Tunnel vehicle trains as the trains were isolated and no interviewing could take place. It was also not possible to obtain any survey results from Dover to France until August 2021. It should be noted that there was very little travel related traffic at that time. Results for when the survey was not operating were limited to totals and the method used can be found here Overseas travel and tourism, provisional: April to June 2020 publication in Section 6: Data sources and quality.. Although traffic volumes have increased during 2021 figures should be treated with caution as the numbers are much smaller than in the past and are subject to higher sampling errors than previous estimates released.  

Accuracy of the IPS estimates 

Estimates produced from the IPS are subject to sampling errors that result because not every traveller to or from the UK is interviewed on the survey. Sampling errors are determined both by the sample design and by the sample size - generally speaking, the larger the sample supporting a particular estimate, the proportionately smaller is its sampling error. The survey sample size in 2021 is much smaller than in previous years because of the travel restrictions resulting from the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.   

The estimates presented in this article for the whole of 2020 must be treated with particular caution, since the methods used have not been fully scrutinised or tested.   

The estimates presented in this article make the best use of the available data and methods to produce estimates of international visits and spending. However, as noted, the numbers are small, and the results should be treated with caution. 

Uncertainty

The accuracy of the estimates is expressed in terms of confidence intervals. For more information on how we measure and communicate uncertainty for our surveys, see our Uncertainty and how we measure it page

The following guidelines are provided to aid in the interpretation of the estimates, and to enable their reliability to be assessed: 

  • % confidence interval below 10%: precise 

  • % confidence interval between 10% and 20%: reasonably precise 

  • % confidence interval between 20% and 40%: acceptable 

  • % confidence interval over 40%: unreliable (these estimates should be used with caution for practical purposes). 

Tables 3a, 3b, 3c and 3d show the 95% confidence intervals for the estimates of the total number of visits and expenditure for both overseas residents visiting the UK and UK residents going abroad.

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Contact details for this Statistical bulletin

Angie Osborn
socialsurveys@ons.gov.uk
Telephone: +44 1633 455270