Central Region: Tourists are castle “addicts”

Published on 11 March 2011 - Updated 25 March 2011
Cet article date d'il y a plus de 13 ans

80% of French and 87% of foreign visitors come to see the castles and monuments in the region. These are the preliminary figures contained in a visitor study, revealed at the 9th meeting of the Tourism Convention. The study also contains numerous other statistics.

The 2010 study

The visitor study was carried out by the 4V consultancy on behalf of the Val de Loire central region tourist board (CRT Centre-Val de Loire), in partnership with the departmental tourist board (CDT) and 237 professionals who distributed and promoted the self-administered questionnaire given to visitors. 

The large number of stakeholders enabled 12,000 questionnaires to be collected, (an excellent 10% rate of return) yielding an abnormally large database enabling the behaviours and expectations of visitors to be understood.  

The CDT and the professionals involved will also receive data relevant to their district or their site (if there are at least 100 questionnaires). 

A very full set of results

The overall trends show: 

  • The district’s reputation is the primary reason that the French (38%) and foreign visitors (51%) give for visiting.
  • Almost half of the visitors are over 55. 
  • The Loire valley is a destination which is as visited in the spring as it is in the summer, and the tourist season even extends into the autumn.
  • The internet has become, by far, the most important tool used to plan a trip and more and more for making bookings.
  • In 2010, 1 foreign visitor out of every 2 came for the first time: it remains to be seen whether this represents a strong revitalisation of the client base, or a difficulty in retaining them.
  • The most popular Loire Valley departments are: Indre-et-Loire, Loir-et-Cher and Loiret.

Visitors can be grouped into one of three types: 

  • Day-trippers (no overnight stay): 90% of these are French, of whom 60% come from the Central Region and 12% from the Île-de-France (IDF). Average expenditure: €86 per person per day.
  • Itinerant tourists (staying in more than one place): 56% are French (26% from the IDF) followed by the British (20%), the Germans (18%) and the Dutch (17%). Average expenditure: €75 per person per day.
  • ‘Sedentary’ tourists (staying in one place): 76% are French (28% from the IDF) followed by the British (25%), the Dutch (22%) and the Belgians (19%). Average expenditure: €61 per person per day.

‘Sedentary’ tourists like: 

  • Castles and the historical heritage (3 out of 4)
  • The calm and tranquillity (1 out of 2)
  • Nature and the environment (1 out of 2), in particular the parks and gardens 
  • Wines, local produce and gastronomy (1 out of 3).

On the internet:

On this site:

News

Photo d une rue de la ville de Luynes. On voit quelques maisons anciennes (tuffeau, colombages...) et une cabine téléphonique rouge.
Licence CC BY-NC-SA Francis Vautier / Mission Val de Loire

29/10/2024

[Fr] AAC "Labels Patrimoniaux : stop ou encore ?"

Le projet LAPTER (Labels patrimoniaux et touristiques en région Centre-Val de Loire : une ressource territoriale ?) se penche depuis 2022 sur la mobilisation...

L audionaturaliste Boris Jollivet fait écouter des chants d oiseaux à un groupe d enfants à l aide de son matériel audiovisuel (micro, parabole, casques).
Licence CC BY--NC-SA Francis Vautier / Mission Val de Loire

29/10/2024

[Fr] Retour en images sur les Escales ligériennes 2024

Nos Escales ligériennes se sont déroulées à Chalonnes-sur-Loire et Savonnières cette année, fin septembre et début octobre. Plus modestes que les...

Texte en bleu sur fond jaune qui dit "Les RDV du Val de Loire #14"

28/10/2024

[Fr] La Mission Val de Loire vous donne Rendez-vous !

La Mission Val de Loire organise les 14es Rendez-vous du Val de Loire patrimoine mondial, une journée d’échanges et de partage sur les projets et enjeux...