A pool at Secret Bay in Dominica. Dominica is reporting another major increase in visitor arrivals as the island moves through one of the biggest tourism development periods in its history.

During a destination presentation at CHTA Marketplace 2026 in Antigua, officials outlined strong growth across both stayover and cruise tourism, along with a wave of infrastructure projects reshaping the Nature Island’s tourism sector.

According to Discover Dominica Authority CEO and Director of Tourism Marva Williams, total visitor arrivals climbed to 496,635 in 2025, up from 432,989 in 2024, representing average growth of roughly 15 percent.

That growth was driven by continued increases in both stayover and cruise arrivals.

Stayover arrivals rose by 19 percent to 99,846 visitors in 2025, surpassing the island’s pre-pandemic 2019 levels. The momentum has continued into this year, with first-quarter stayover arrivals in 2026 rising another 10 percent compared to the same period last year.

Dominica welcomed 409,761 cruise passengers between October 2025 and April 2026, representing a 23 percent increase over the previous cruise season and the island’s strongest cruise performance since the 2010-2011 season.

The numbers reflect growing demand for destinations centered on nature, adventure and wellness travel, sectors where Dominica has increasingly positioned itself within the Caribbean tourism market.

The island is also entering a period of major infrastructure expansion that could significantly reshape accessibility and tourism growth over the next several years.

Among the largest projects is the construction of Dominica’s long-awaited international airport, which is expected to dramatically expand airlift opportunities to the island once completed.

Dominica is also developing a geothermal energy plant and the Dominica Cable Car, which officials say will become the world’s longest mono cable car system when it opens in October 2026.

The project is expected to create direct access into the island’s interior rainforest and geothermal areas, including the Boiling Lake region that has long been one of Dominica’s signature hiking attractions.

Additional tourism development projects include a new full-service marina and continued expansion of the island’s wellness and marine tourism sectors.

Dominica has also launched the world’s first Sperm Whale Reserve, part of a broader effort to position the island around sustainable marine tourism and conservation-focused travel experiences.

Dominica’s tourism growth continues to be fueled heavily by travelers seeking outdoor-focused vacations and lower-density Caribbean experiences.

Unlike many resort-driven Caribbean destinations, Dominica has built much of its tourism identity around hiking, diving, waterfalls, hot springs, rainforest experiences and wellness travel.

The island has also increasingly expanded its positioning within the romance and wellness categories through campaigns centered on nature-focused travel experiences.

Tourism officials are also continuing to push summer travel to the island, highlighting hiking trails, diving sites, culinary tourism and family-oriented adventure experiences across the destination.

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