Jamaica Carnival drives J$165.7 billion economic impact in 2025

Carnival continues to prove its value as a major driver of Jamaica’s tourism economy, with the 2025 celebrations generating an estimated $7.7 billion in direct spending and contributing a total economic impact of $165.7 billion, according to Jamaica’s Minister of Tourism Edmund Bartlett.

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The 2025 figures represent a 48 per cent increase in revenue compared with the previous year. Bartlett shared the data during a media briefing at the Jamaica Pegasus hotel in New Kingston, highlighting the deep connection between entertainment and tourism on the island.

He noted that Carnival 2024, which marked a return to pre-pandemic visitor levels, produced $4.42 billion in direct spending and a total economic impact of $95.4 billion.

“Carnival in Jamaica is an economic engine…it is generating spending, supporting jobs, energising small businesses, strengthening supply chains, and creating demand for Kingston and Jamaica,” Bartlett said.

“Numbers like these do not whisper, they shout. They tell investors and partners that Carnival is not just cultural excitement but that it makes solid economic sense,” he added.

Bartlett reported that overseas visitors spent an average of US$5,320.89 per person in 2025, up from US$3,209 in 2024, resulting in total direct spending of US$23.6 million ($3.76 billion). Among first-time visitors, 78.7 per cent said they travelled specifically for Carnival, while the figure rose to 87.7 per cent among repeat visitors.

“That means that Carnival is not only simply entertainment, it is motivating travel, building loyalty, and giving people a real reason to choose Jamaica again and again,” Bartlett said. “Experience drives travel decisions, they deepen visitor spend and lengthen stays. Visitors travel for something they can feel, something they can participate in, and something they can carry home and talk about long after the trip ends,” added Bartlett.

The minister also noted Carnival’s role in the country’s broader tourism recovery following Hurricane Melissa in October 2025, highlighting that Jamaica has already reached approximately 75 per cent of projected visitor arrivals for the months after the storm.

“That means that come winter, and heading into 2027, we could have a full recovery of the sector,” he said. “There have been significant increases in tourist arrivals and we are seeing figures that surpass our initial projections. We’ve had to rewrite the narrative in terms of projected performance for the year and that’s because of how well we’ve recovered as a country,” declared Bartlett.

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With pre-Carnival events starting April 8 and the main road march scheduled for April 12, Carnival 2026 is expected to once again transform Kingston into a hub of activity, driving demand for accommodation, transportation, food services, and creative talent.

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