
Dubai attracts 8.68 million international visitors in first 5 months of 2025
Dubai attracted 8.68 million international visitors from January to May 2025, marking a 7 per cent increase compared to the same period in 2024, which recorded 8.12 million tourists, according to the latest data released by the Dubai Department of Economy and Tourism (DET).
In May alone, the city welcomed 1.53 million international tourists, the Tourism Performance Report January – May 2025 showed.
Western Europe was the leading source market, contributing 1.917 million visitors and accounting for 22 per cent of the total. Russia, the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) countries, and Eastern Europe followed with 1.396 million tourists (16 per cent).
International visitors from Asia and MENA region
South Asia came third with 1.242 million visitors (14 per cent), while the GCC region accounted for 1.275 million (15 per cent).
The Middle East and North Africa brought in 989,000 visitors (11 per cent), followed by Northeast and Southeast Asia with 771,000 tourists (9 per cent).
The Americas contributed 601,000 visitors (7 per cent), Africa 346,000 (4 per cent), and Australia 141,000 (2 per cent).
Dubai hotel inventory
As of May, Dubai's hotel inventory grew to 825 establishments offering 153,356 rooms, up from 822 hotels and 150,202 rooms in May 2024.
Average hotel occupancy increased to 83 per cent, up from 81 per cent during the same period last year. Total occupied room nights reached 19.09 million, a 4 per cent rise from 18.34 million in 2024.
Visitors stayed an average of 3.8 nights per trip. The average daily room rate climbed to Dhs620, a 5 per cent increase from Dhs590 in the previous year.

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Newsweek
5 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Donald Trump Notches His Best Week Yet
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Trump also announced that the U.S. had finalized a long-sought agreement with China to resume the export of rare earth minerals crucial to American technology manufacturing. "We just signed with China the other day," Trump said, while Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told Bloomberg that the deal was "signed and sealed." Bessent elaborated on the agreement, saying that Trump had "set the table with a very important phone call" with Chinese President Xi Jinping which had led to the U.S. securing the deal. "In dealing with the world's second largest economy, we approached each other with mutual respect," he added, adding that part of the agreement was tariffs coming down and rare earth magnets starting to flow back to the U.S. "They formed the core of a lot of our industrial base," he said. The Chinese Commerce Ministry confirmed it would approve export applications for "controlled items" and in turn, the U.S. would remove several restrictive measures on Chinese technologies. 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Newsweek
5 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Hamilton Optimistic in Leclerc Battle After Austrian Grand Prix Qualifying
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Ferrari driver Lewis Hamilton qualified fourth for the Austrian Grand Prix - showing more comfort and pace than he has all season long. Hamilton's season is full of poor qualifying performances. After each session, he shares the lack of comfort that he feels in the SF25. At the Red Bull Ring, the seven-time World Champion sang a different tune, feeling more optimistic about the race and how the car was driving. Fourth placed qualifier Lewis Hamilton of Great Britain and Scuderia Ferrari is interviewed during qualifying ahead of the F1 Grand Prix of Austria at Red Bull Ring on June 28, 2025 in Spielberg, Austria. Fourth placed qualifier Lewis Hamilton of Great Britain and Scuderia Ferrari is interviewed during qualifying ahead of the F1 Grand Prix of Austria at Red Bull Ring on June 28, 2025 in Spielberg, Austria. Photo by"I'm grateful that we're on the second row at least. And usually our race is better, our car is better in the race generally than it is usually qualifying," Hamilton told the media. "So we've improved in qualifying. Let's hope that we can carry that on into the race. The guys in the garage are always doing an amazing job. But I just think how calm the people, the guys were, the head engineers were on the pit wall. "The timing was spot on. And when they got us into the pit lane, the gaps they were giving us, staying out of the traffic management, not getting penalties for traffic here. The turnarounds were just spot on." Hamilton got thoroughly beaten in qualifying by his teammate at Mercedes, George Russell, last season. This season, Leclerc is beating Hamilton 8-3 in the head-to-head battle. Over the past couple of seasons, Hamilton has lost his edge in qualifying pace, an area that was his strong suit during his earlier days. Leclerc is one of the fastest drivers over one lap, and Russell also fits that description. It's understandable that Hamilton would struggle later in his career to keep up with these younger drivers, though the gap was somewhat jarring. On Saturday, Hamilton showed renewed qualifying pace - he was less than a tenth off Leclerc, a big improvement over most of the season. The difference between the Ferrari teammates is closing up, and Hamilton's tone is sounding more optimistic than usual. "And I think edging closer in terms of performance to Charles, who's really, really used to the car, he hardly ever changes it," Hamilton added. "So I think that's really positive. I think also I had more time in the lap. I was nearly three tenths up going into turn six and I had a massive snap in it. And then I came across a line 0.06 up, so that would have put me second. "So there's positives in it for sure, and I think operationally the team did a really great job today. It's the best qualifying process operationally that we've done." For more F1 news, head on over to Newsweek Sports.
Yahoo
6 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Pictures reveal inside of Bayesian sunken superyacht after it was resurfaced for full examination
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