1. Main points
- The percentage of in-person domestic spending in tourism-related industries dipped during 2020 and 2021 but has since recovered to around 6% of all in-person domestic spending.
- The restaurant industry had the largest percentage of in-person domestic tourism spending across the time series, followed by accommodation and retail goods.
- The percentage of face-to-face domestic spending on travel agents has decreased across the time series, while the percentage spent on fast-food restaurants has increased.
- Spending on tourist industries accounts for around half of in-person spending by international visitors to the UK.
2. Overview of spending data
The Office for National Statistics (ONS) has entered into an agreement with Visa to receive aggregated and anonymised data on UK card payments. This data source offers new opportunities to understand UK consumer spending. This is the latest in a series of publications that provide new and granular insights for users. Our previous articles can be found in Section 8: Related links.
This bulletin explores the amount of in-person (also referred to as face-to-face) spending on Visa cards that we can attribute to spending categories associated with tourism. We have made efforts to align the categories in these data with the categories used by the Department for Culture, Media, and Sport (DCMS) in their DCMS Sector Economic Estimates for ease of use.
It includes data for England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland. In this bulletin, “spend” or “spending” refers to spending by UK residents with bank cards issued by Visa when referring to domestic tourism, or spending at UK merchants by consumers with Visa bank cards issued by non-UK countries when referring to international tourism. All spending referred to in this bulletin occurred in person, rather than online.
The analysis in this bulletin covers credit and debit card spending, which are part of the UK spending landscape, but this is not exhaustive. Consumers may also use a variety of other payment methods, including cash, direct debit, faster payments, or standing orders, which will not be reflected in these data. For more information on card usage, see Section 7: Data sources and quality and our Regional consumer card spending trends quality and methodology information (QMI).
Nôl i'r tabl cynnwys6. Glossary
Cardholder location
For spending by cardholders from the UK, cardholder postal sector, district or area is inferred by Visa. Visa analyse anonymised cardholder spending patterns, along with merchant location, to form a predictive view of a cardholder's likely home location. This is a predicted data attribute only, so a cardholder's exact home address cannot be determined. Data are aggregated, so it is not possible to identify any single individual.
For spending by international cardholders, cardholder location is presented at country level. These data are not inferred, but are based on cards issued in a given country. Because Visa card usage varies internationally, we do not encourage comparisons across different countries, including with the UK.
Debit and credit card transactions
Debit and credit cards facilitate the transfer of money for goods and services rendered without the usage of cash. These transactions occur both in-person, through contactless and chip and pin, and online, through mail order or e-commerce. All card data that we receive are anonymised and aggregated to protect against disclosure of individuals' consumer data.
Financial payment system
Debit and credit cards are provided by card issuers that enable consumers to make payment transactions. Card issuers are financial institutions, such as a bank or building society, responsible for providing a customer with a card. Card schemes, of which Visa is one, are payment networks that provide a range of services. For consumer payments, card schemes provide secure connectivity for merchants to transact with cardholders, either face-to-face or online, and ensure those merchants safely receive their funds from the cardholder's bank.
Merchant category group
A merchant category group (MCG) defines an industry, using a set of merchant category codes (MCCs). An MCC is a four-digit number assigned to describe a merchant's primary business, based on annual sales volume measured in local currency.
For this bulletin, certain MCGs have been selected because of their alignment with typical tourism activities, and with the categories used by the Department for Culture, Media, and Sport (DCMS) in their DCMS Sector Economic Estimates. We have categorised these as either always being considered tourism, or considered tourism when happening outside of a consumer’s local area.
The MCGs considered to always be related to tourism are:
- airlines
- lodging (“accommodation” in this bulletin)
- travel services (“travel agents” in this bulletin)
The industries considered to be related to tourism when spending occurs outside of a consumer’s local area are:
- entertainment (“entertainment and culture” in this bulletin)
- quick service restaurants (“fast-food restaurants” in this bulletin)
- restaurants
- retail goods
- transportation
- vehicle rental
Merchant location
Merchant location is gathered from the merchant’s register. The merchant acquirer (the bank or financial institution that processes card payments for a merchant) is responsible for providing the card network with the correct location of each merchant outlet. For in-store transactions with a fixed location, the merchant location will be where the transaction took place. For merchants that do not have a fixed location, the location can either be where the transaction took place or the merchant's principal place of business.
Online and face-to-face spending
This bulletin only refers to face-to-face, or in-person, spending. Face-to-face transactions are defined as those where the credit or debit card is present for the transaction. This is where a consumer buys something in-store and uses a payment card, including contactless payments. Online transactions are defined as transactions where the payment card is not present. This includes where a purchase is made over the internet or telephone, or where an app is used to take payment.
Tourism
The United Nations definition of tourism states that tourism can only happen outside of a person’s usual place of residence, as described in their International Recommendations for Tourism Statistics 2008 publication (PDF, 2.3MB). As a proxy for this, we have removed spend that occurs within a person’s own postal area in the domestic data. This is only a proxy, as postal areas in the UK vary considerably in size and in data quality.
These estimates are only indicative of the direction of change in the time series, and not of overall expenditure in tourism-related industries.
Nôl i'r tabl cynnwys7. Data sources and quality
Card spending data
Analysis in this bulletin is based on aggregated and anonymised data on UK card payments provided by Visa Europe Limited. Visa operate a card scheme that is used by a variety of card issuers, including debit and credit card providers. Visa has a Global Privacy Program to ensure proper safeguards are applied to personal information that they collect, use and share, and respecting privacy is crucial. Visa aggregate and anonymise data before sharing to remove information that would allow us to identify the activity of an individual or business within the dataset.
Card spending covers part of UK spending habits and is not exhaustive. For example, it will not cover cash transactions, direct debit payments, or other payment methods such as Buy-Now-Pay-Later. In 2022, 59% of payment transactions in the UK were made using cards, 14% using cash, and 10% using direct debit, according to UK Finance’s Payment markets summary (PDF, 436KB). These figures reflect the number of transactions made and would differ if looking at the value of payments. The value spent on cards is lower as a percentage of these types of transaction, because of large-value payments such as salaries, mortgages, and bills that are usually paid through direct debit and faster payments. Overall, UK credit and debit card holders made 2.5 billion purchase transactions, totalling £84 billion, in June 2023, as explained in UK Finance’s Card spending update for June 2023 (PDF, 226KB).
These data, although not adjusted for inflation, can be used to give an indication of spending habits. Our Regional consumer card spending trends quality and methodology information (QMI) about the Visa data covers the strengths and limitations of the data.
Excluded categories
Spending in some merchant categories is deemed as sensitive by Visa for legal reasons. This spending is excluded from the data published in this bulletin. The following types of spending are excluded:
- betting and gambling
- insurance, money, and financial institutions
- religious and political organisations
- legal services
- funeral services
Official statistics in development
These statistics are labelled as “official statistics in development”. Until September 2023, these were called “experimental statistics”. Read more about the change in the guide to official statistics in development.
Future developments
We will continue to explore novel estimates of tourism activities using data sources such as this one.
We aim to develop a regular faster indicator for spending patterns on travel and tourism. This work will include:
- research into how international cardholder spending can be weighted to account for variations in Visa market penetration across different countries
- research into developing a dynamic definition for domestic tourism expenditure that is suitable for use with Visa cardholder data
- research into different patterns of spending based on the mode of transaction (for example, using cash or bank cards from different providers)
9. Cite this bulletin
Office for National Statistics (ONS), released 2 October 2024, ONS website, statistical bulletin, Consumer card spending, UK tourism-related sectors: 2019 to 2024