Philenews

Cyprus Tourism Strategy 2035: Balancing Quantity, Quality, and Risk?

Published March 18, 2026, 12:13
Cyprus Tourism Strategy 2035: Balancing Quantity, Quality, and Risk?

The new National Tourism Strategy for Cyprus until 2035 aims to attract 5 million visitors. However, questions arise regarding the emphasis on quantity over quality, as a more qualitative approach with fewer visitors and higher spending could yield similar revenues with lower risks to infrastructure, the environment, and labor. The strategy does not adequately address six risks threatening tourism: wars in the region, leaks from the Akkuyu nuclear power plant, disasters from climate change, seasonality, dependence on a few source countries, and resource scarcity (water, health, safety). While the European Commission sets standards for the first three risks, the strategy does not offer specific solutions for addressing them. Cyprus has adequate hotel infrastructure, with a concentration of hotels and beds in areas such as Paphos, Ayia Napa, Limassol, and Larnaca. Nicosia and the mountains offer alternative forms of tourism but require further development. To address seasonality and dependence on a few markets, destination management and promotion (DMO/DMMO) are crucial. Expanding the tourist season and attracting visitors from new markets, such as India, Israel, Arab countries, the USA, and China, are essential. Leveraging Cyprus's mild winters to promote winter tourism is also an opportunity.