An overview of the tourism industry in south africa



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Eastern Cape

7.7%

7.8%

7.6%

Limpopo

6.0%

5.7%

7.0%

Northern Cape

2.7%

2.6%

2.6%

(Compiled by NMMU Tourism Research Unit from SA Annual Tourism Report 2005)


PROVINCIAL DISTRIBUTION OF FOREIGN TOURISTS % BEDNIGHTS

Province

2003

2004

2005

Gauteng

31%

31%

31%

Western Cape

26%

28%

28%

KwaZulu Natal

15%

15%

16%

Mpumalanga

7%

7%

7%

Eastern Cape

6%

6%

6%

Free State

7%

5%

4%

Limpopo

3%

3%

4%

North West

4%

3%

3%

Northern Cape

1%

1%

1%

(Compiled by NMMU Tourism Research Unit from SA Annual Tourism Report 2005)
Commentary:


  • The comparative tables above indicate the percentage of foreign tourists visiting each province in South Africa and the percentage of bed nights spent in each province




  • The above tables indicate that nearly 8% of all foreign tourists to South Africa visit the Eastern Cape but only 6% spend at least one night in the province. This means that 2% leak out e.g. they are either dropped off at Port Elizabeth or East London airports for departures to other provinces or to O.R. Tambo International Airport before leaving South Africa but they do not spend a single night in the province



    1. Accommodation Growth in South Africa 1996 and 2004




Accommodation

Beds 2004

Beds 1996

% growth, 2004 over 1996

Hotels

120 000

85 000

41%

Resort & Self-catering

194 000

75 000

159%

Guest Houses & Guest Farms

46 200

30 000

54%

Bed & Breakfast

26 000

8 000

325%

Game & Hunting Lodges

25 200

24 000

5%

Timeshare

24 400

22 000

11%

Executive Apartments

5 000

3 000

67%













TOTAL

440 800

247 000

79%

(Source: Grant Thornton 2004)
Commentary:
Unfortunately a more recent survey has not been undertaken but the above table clearly indicates national growth in the accommodation sector.



STATISTICS SOUTH AFRICA TOURIST ACCOMMODATION STATISTICS FROM DECEMBER 2005 TO DECEMBER 2006 P6410





Dec

2005

Jan

2006

Feb

2006

Mar

2006

Apr

2006

May

2006

Jun

2006

Jul

2006

Aug

2006

Sep

2006

Oct

2006

Nov

2006

Dec

2006











































Hotels








































Occupancy rate

61,0%

59,3%

72,8%

70,3%

63,5%

62,8%

60,8%

61,6%

65,6%

73,9%

71,8%

77,0%

63,0%

Average income

R554

R579

R573

R555

R519

R514

R528

R526

R501

R537

R571

R636

R640











































Caravan Parks & Camping sites








































Occupancy rate

37,8%

18,5%

12,0%

15,8%

21,7%

9,8%

10,0%

11,9%

15,4%

14,7%

11,6%

16,1%

34,4%

Average income

R281

R197

R215

R239

R172

R254

R214

R225

R165

R238

R257

R233

R288











































Guest Houses & Guest Farms








































Occupancy rate

44%

39%

47%

49%

47%

35%

34%

40%

48%

50%

50%

53%

59%

Average income

R537

R542

R541

R450

R451

R390

R420

R439

R461

R441

R472

R527

R586











































Other Accommodation








































Occupancy rate

37,4%

35,5%

39,0%

39,8%

42,7%

35,5%

34,4%

38,6%

38,0%

40,9%

39,3%

39,5%

46,4%

Average income

R370

R374

R305

R312

R321

R291

R283

R278

R295

R317

R322

R380

R399

(Comparative tables compiled by the NMMU Tourism Research Unit)
Commentary:


  • Stay unit refers to the unit of accommodation that is available to be charged out to guests e.g. a powered site in a caravan park or a room in a hotel

  • There are no published releases for the provinces. Provinces will have to collect there own accommodation statistics

  • Average income is the average income per stay unit nights sold e.g. hotel room nights sold




    1. Accommodation Usage Foreign Tourists to South Africa Bed Nights 2003, 2004, 2005




Establishment

2003

2004

2005

Hotels

14,683,912

13,534,840

13,332,598

Guest Houses

3,903,069

3,919,362

3,872,463

Bed & Breakfasts

3,167,420

3,164,880

3,673,093

Game Lodges

2,905,801

2,804,163

2,562,387

Self-catering units

4,336,750

3,951,303

5,793,860

Backpacking Hostels

3,321,407

3,007,731

3,194,332

Camping & Caravan Parks

1,237,627

1,183,786

1,015,201

Trains/Ships

3,521,699

1,059,860

128,651

TOTAL

37,077,685

32,625,925

33,572,585

(Source: SA Annual Tourism Reports 2003, 2004 and 2005)
Commentary:
The table above indicates recent growth in the demand for self-catering units by foreign tourists and it is assumed that these are mainly independent travellers. Group tours usually purchase an inclusive package of which pre-booked hotel accommodation is included in the package. Results for 2006 have not yet been released.


    1. Foreign Tourism Accommodation Usage (bed nights) Per Quarter South Africa 2005 and 2006


Establishments

Q1

2005

Q1

2006

Q2

2005

Q2

2006

Q3

2005

Q3

2006

Q4

2005

Q4

2006

VFR

6,600,062

7,568,648

5,381,807

6,408,553

5,603,726

6,114,404







Hotels

3,474,156

4,255,856

2,843,103

2,751,091

2,999,938

3,144,954







Guest Houses

921,565

1,445,585

806,264

1,010,753

1,003,595

762,106







Game Lodges

552,310

680,503

528,625

709,396

707,884

836,068







Self-catering units

1,084,325

1,326,821

1,386,391

1,807,610

1,533,324

1,783,710







Bed & Breakfasts

929,318

1,015,983

726,113

642,599

853,305

760,125







Other establishments

911,003

779,627

548,750

1,099,573

373,735

608,337







Backpacking hostels

963,641

569,997

535,233

559,979

851,932

577,859







Camping & caravan parks

224,072

256,528

252,970

252,276

292,000

182,991







Hospitals

75,934

172,613

136,706

82,985

86,185

130,431







Train/ship

28,303

17,877

17,289

25,480

32,520

14,285



































Commentary:
The table above indicates the seasonality of accommodation used by foreign tourists visiting South Africa. The comparative results for Q4 have not been released yet but there is an indication of year round usage which matches the profile of independent travellers.



    1. Type Of Package Used By Foreign Tourists To SA 2004




  • Fully inclusive package is where airfare, accommodation, coach tours and food are all included

  • Full package is where airfare, accommodation and food is included

  • Package is where airfare and accommodation is included

  • Independent travellers book airfare, accommodation, coach tours and food separately



Country

Fully inclusive

package

Full package

Package

Independent

Africa & Middle East













Angola

9.8%

1.0%

1.3%

87.8%

Botswana

23.4%

1.8%

5.6%

69.2%

Kenya

26.3%

2.7%

2.5%

68.5%

Lesotho

25.6%

5.3%

1.7%

67.4%

Malawi

13.4%

4.9%

1.7%

79.9%

Mozambique

7.1%

5.2%

3.2%

84.5%

Namibia

13.2%

5.6%

1.5%

79.7%

Nigeria

19.7%

2.8%

2.5%

75.0%

Swaziland

27.8%

2.5%

1.7%

67.9%

Tanzania

12.0%

3.3%

4.3%

80.4%

Zambia

10.8%

3.2%

3.4%

82.6%

Zimbabwe

12.8%

5.4%

1.6%

80.1%

Other Africa & Middle East

18.6%

4.8%

4.6%

72.1%
















Americas













Brazil

27.9%

5.4%

4.4%

62.3%

Canada

27.1%

2.7%

2.6%

67.7%

USA

28.9%

4.2%

2.5%

64.4%

Other Americas

34.3%

4.7%

5.1%

55.8%
















Asia & Australasia













Australia

17.8%

3.8%

2.2%

76.2%

China (inc Hong Kong)

38.2%

9.1%

5.4%

47.3%

India

23.0%

4.8%

1.3%

71.0%

Japan

37.2%

7.3%

6.5%

49.0%
















Europe













France

44.9%

4.4%

3.0%

47.7%

Germany

27.9%

4.9%

3.3%

63.9%

Italy

39.0%

6.3%

7.5%

47.3%

Netherlands

28.3%

3.4%

5.2%

63.1%

Sweden

23.5%

3.4%

5.5%

67.7%

United Kingdom

22.1%

3.8%

2.6%

71.5%

Other Europe

25.7%

4.6%

3.4%

66.2%
















ALL FOREIGN TOURIST

25.2%

4.4%

3.3%

67.1%

From the above it is evident that the majority of foreign tourists to South Africa are independent travelers. This means that either South Africa is mainly attracting the independent travel market or that South African package tours are not competitive. Competitiveness is a function of price related to value and product differentiation. There have been complaints from overseas tour operators that South Africa is offering too many of the same products i.e. not enough variety. It is worth noting that China, Japan, Italy and France are the exceptions.




    1. Guesthouse Accommodation In South Africa


2.15.1 Guesthouse Definition: (Tourism Grading Council of South Africa)
A guesthouse is either defined as a converted house, manor, etc adapted to accommodate overnight guests or it may be a purpose built facility. A guesthouse is run as a commercial operation and is often owner-managed. A guesthouse has public areas that are for the exclusive use of the guest. The owner/manager either lives off-site, or in a separate area within the property. A further definition is that guesthouses must offer three meals a day as opposed to only bed and breakfast.


STATS SA TOURIST ACCOMMODATION GUEST HOUSES 2005

Guest-houses and guest-farms

12 months 2005







Average stay units available

10 817

Total stay unit nights sold

1 839 800

Average occupancy rate (%)

37,9%

Average income per stay unit nights sold (Rand)

R330.18

Income from accommodation (R million)

R610.5m (70%)

Income from restaurant and bar sales (R million)

R183.5m (21%)

Other income (R million)

R 75.0m (9%)

Total income (R million)

R869.4m (100%)







Stats SA (Sample of 1 300 enterprises from a population of about 5 500)
Note: Stay unit refers to the unit of accommodation that is available to be charged out to guests, for example, a powered site in a caravan park or a room in a hotel.
Average income per stay unit night sold refers to average rate per stay unit i.e. rate per room in a hotel or powered site in a caravan site. The total income from accommodation divided by the number of stay units sold in a survey period multiplied by 1000.
Stay unit nights sold refers to the total number of stay units occupied on each night during the survey period.
In 2005, according to the above information, it is estimated that an average of 10 817 rooms were available in guesthouses, a total of 1.84 million room nights were sold, the average room night sold was R330.18, the average room occupancy rate was 38% and the total income generated by guesthouse accommodation was R611 million. Accommodation accounted for 70% of turnover.
Combining guest farm accommodation with guesthouse accommodation probably pulled down the average rate of a room night sold in guesthouses and also the average room occupancy rate. Therefore to benchmark the different rates offered in guesthouse accommodation, a sample has been taken of those guesthouses in the Eastern Cape included in the AA Accommodation Guide and the Portfolio Bed and Breakfast Collection. The accommodation guides compiled by these two cooperative marketing organisations will identify all the facilities offered by the listed advertisers.
The table below is an estimate of accommodation available in South Africa according to surveys undertaken by Grant Thornton in 1996 and 2004. According to these surveys, the number of guesthouses in South Africa increased by 35% between 1996 and 2004 i.e. an average growth rate of about 4% per annum. However, it is not possible to measure how many guesthouses closed down during this period because there is no national database of guesthouse accommodation.

A COMPARISON OF ACCOMMODATION GROWTH IN SA

Accommodation

Beds 2004

Beds 1996










Hotels

120 000

85 000

Resort & Self-catering

194 000

75 000

Guest Houses & Guest Farms

46 200

30 000

Bed & Breakfast

26 000

8 000

Game & Hunting Lodges

25 200

24 000

Timeshare

24 400

22 000

Executive Apartments

5 000

3 000










TOTAL

440 800

247 000

(Source: Grant Thornton surveys 1996 and 2004)

2.15.2 East Cape Guesthouses advertised AA Accommodation Guide 2005
There are only a few guesthouses in the Eastern Cape that are listed in the 2005 AA Accommodation Guide. These include:


Name of Guesthouse

No of Rooms

Average Rate

Place













The Thatch Guesthouse

5 rooms

R300 – R400 per person

East London

Devereux Lodge

12 rooms

R300 – R400 per room

East London

Quarry Lake Inn

16 rooms

R300 – R400 per person

East London

Hazeldene Guesthouse

5 rooms

R400 – R500 per room

Port Elizabeth

Sir Roy’s Guesthouse

10 rooms

R300 – R400 per person

Port Elizabeth


Commentary:
Accommodation offered at Quarry Lake Inn in East London provides a benchmark. The bill for a one night stay in a double room amounted to R588.00 i.e. Accommodation R560.00, Drinks/Beverages R28.00. Vat included @14.00% = R72.21
Establishments that advertise in acknowledged accommodation guides provide a good benchmark because they have to conform to a national standard. However, even if the standard is not a grading or accreditation certificate awarded by the Tourism Grading Council of South Africa it can still be based on reputation e.g. AA Accommodation Guide has established its own standard of excellence.


2.15.3 Eastern Cape Guesthouses advertised in the Portfolio Bed & Breakfast Collection 2006


Name of Guesthouse

No of Rooms

Average Rate

Place













Admiralty Beach House

5 rooms + 2

R325 – R450 per person

Port Elizabeth

Anchorage Guest House

5 rooms

R295 + per person

Port Elizabeth

Carslogie House

4 rooms

R275 + per person

Port Elizabeth

Kingfisher Guest House

6 rooms

R250 + per person

Port Elizabeth

Lange’s Guest House

6 rooms

R220 – R340 per person

Port Elizabeth

Tiran Guest House

5 rooms + 2

R350 per room

Port Elizabeth

Conifer Beach House

4 rooms + 1

R220 – R300 per person

Port Elizabeth

All of the above would be categorised as guesthouses because they offer the option of other meals. If the establishment only offers breakfast then by definition it is a bed & breakfast regardless of whether it is luxury accommodation or not.


2.15.4 Port Elizabeth 5-Star Accommodation Establishments


Name of Establishment

Rooms

Beds

Rate













Lemon Tree Lane B&B

6

13

From R295 pp

Admiralty Beach House

7

19

R350 – R550 pp

Anchorage Guest House

5

14

From R350 pp

Hacklewood Hill Country House

8

16

R500 – R1320 pp

King’s Tide Boutique Hotel

10

20

R295 – R658 pp

The Windermere Hotel

8

16

R690 – R1265 pp














Grading:
Lemon Tree Lane TGCSA 5-Star Bed & Breakfast

Admiralty Beach House TGCSA 5-Star Guest House

Anchorage Guest House TGCSA 5-Star Bed & Breakfast

Hacklewood Hill Country House TGCSA 5-Star Hotel



The Windermere Hotel TGCSA 5-Star Hotel
Commentary:
With reference to the TGCSA grading system it would appear from the above that the difference between a 5-Star Guest House, Boutique Hotel, Country House and Small Hotel is marginal. The Anchorage Guest House is in fact graded as a B&B and Hacklewood Hill Country House is graded as a 5-Star Hotel. The Windermere Hotel would appear to be a Boutique Hotel and yet is graded as a 5-Star Hotel. King’s Tide Boutique Hotel does not appear to be graded.
3. EASTERN CAPE TOURISM: BENCHMARKS AND TRENDS




SA TOURISM QUARTERLY REPORTS 2004 - 2006

EASTERN CAPE PROVINCIAL DISTRIBUTION


Quarters

Provincial

Distribution

(Visitors)

Provincial

Distribution

(Bed Nights)










Q1 2004

9.0%

917,681

Q2 2004

6.3%

784,864

Q3 2004

5.9%

816,563

Q4 2004

8.9%

950,072

TOTAL




3,469,180










Q1 2005

7.8%

948,778

Q2 2005

5.7%

754,971

Q3 2005

7.3%

833,718

Q4 2005

9.2%

1,238,363

TOTAL




3,775,830










Q1 2006

9.0%

1,233,708

Q2 2006

5.0%

953,195

Q3 2006

5.1%

856,998

Q4 2006







TOTAL







(Comparative tables compiled by the NMMU Tourism Research Unit)
Commentary:


  • Once again there has been a change in the system of reporting. The 2005 and 2006 SA Provincial Quarterly Reports only provide information on provincial distribution according to the percentage share of visitors attracted to each province and the number of bed nights spent by foreign tourists in each province

  • According to the above figures, there was an increase of 9% in bed nights spent in the Eastern Cape when comparing 2005 with 2004

  • It would appear from the above figures that to date 506,434 more bed nights have been spent in the Eastern Cape when comparing the first three quarters of 2006 with 2005. This is an increase of 20% over the previous year.

  • On average the Eastern Cape remains the 7th most popular destination for foreign tourists and Q1 and Q4 remain the most popular quarters for foreign visitors (November to March)

  • It is assumed that Nelson Mandela Bay (NMB) would follow a similar trend to the above Eastern Cape tourism growth statistics because previous SA Tourism Quarterly Reports have indicated that nearly 80% of all foreign tourists who visit the Eastern Cape visit NMB



PROVINCIAL DISTRIBUTION – VISITORS EASTERN CAPE




2005

2004

Africa & Middle East

3%

2.3%










Lesotho

3%

2.6%

Malawi

10%

4.7%

Mozambique

7%

0.4%

Nigeria

7%

2.4%

Zambia

13%

4.2%

Zimbabwe

3%

6.0%

Other Africa & Middle East

7%

5.0%










Americas

16%

15.3%










Brazil

13%

5.8%

Canada

19%

20.4%

USA

16%

15.0%

Other Americas

16%

18.1%










Asia & Australasia

10%

10.5%










Australia

15%

16.7%

China

6%

7.5%

India

7%

7.1%

Other Asia & Australasia

11%

9.6%










Europe

24%

25.7%










France

23%

21.4%

Germany

29%

33.3%

Italy

24%

32.4%

Netherlands

27%

28.0%

Sweden

35%

34.8%

United Kingdom

20%

22.6%

Other Europe

22%

22.2%










All Foreign Tourists

8%

7.8%

(Analysis of SA Tourism Reports by NMMU Tourism Research Unit)
Commentary:
The figures in the above table do not represent market share but rather tourism growth from source markets e.g. the UK is the biggest supplier of foreign tourists to South Africa but only 20% of the foreign arrivals from the UK visit the Eastern Cape. Likewise Sweden is not the biggest source market to the Eastern Cape in numbers but of all the Swedish foreign arrivals to South Africa some 35% visit the Eastern Cape which is an indication that the province is popular with Swedish tourists.

4. ANALYSIS OF DOMESTIC TOURISM IN SOUTH AFRICA


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