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KwaZulu-Natal targets close to R1 billion in tourism spend for Easter 2026

Mercury Reporter|Published

Holidaymakers at a Durban beach. KwaZulu-Natal is set to attract nearly R1 billion in tourism spending during the Easter holidays, according to projections.

Image: Leon Lestrade / Independent Newspapers

KwaZulu-Natal is aiming for an Easter tourism spend of nearly R1 billion (R902 million).

KZN Tourism said that according to projections, the province is expecting approximately 312,814 domestic trips and 57,106 international visitors between March 30 and April 5.

This comes on the back of a strong festive season performance, which recorded over 1.2 million visitors across the province, with some districts exceeding 80% occupancy during peak periods.

International tourism continues to recover, with 291,324 foreign arrivals recorded in December 2025, representing a 14% year-on-year increase.

MEC for Economic Development, Tourism and Environmental Affairs, Reverend Musa Zondi, said KZN is entering the Easter period on the back of measurable tourism performance.

“What we are seeing is a continuation of the momentum built during the festive season, where strong occupancy levels and visitor volumes translated into widespread economic participation. Easter builds on that foundation, with travel activity spread across coastal, inland and rural areas”, said MEC Zondi.

Religious tourism remains a key driver of movement during this period, with large pilgrimages expected to draw thousands of worshippers to churches and sites such as Ekuphakameni (Inanda) and Nhlangakazi (Ndwedwe). This is supported by a wide range of church gatherings, conferences and revival services taking place across both urban and rural communities, generating demand across accommodation, transport, hospitality and informal sectors.

Mandy Massey, deputy chairperson of the Federation of Hospitality Association of South Africa(FEDHASA) KZN and Eastern Cape, said: “Occupancy projections across KwaZulu-Natal for Easter 2026 are strong, with many areas tracking in line with - and in some cases exceeding - 2025 levels.”

“Key trends include increased shared accommodation and group travel to optimise costs. More deliberate, value-driven spending decisions during the stay. A very positive continued move toward advanced bookings, rather than last-minute travel. Stable length of stay, with no significant decline compared to last year.”

On the North Coast, forward bookings are showing clear strength, supported by accessibility and repeat domestic travel. Siyabonga Mazibuko, CEO of iLembe Enterprise, said: “The North Coast’s outlook shows early indicators of strong forward bookings, with demand notably higher than the same period last year.’’

Coastal destinations such as Ballito and Salt Rock remain particularly popular for the Easter period, driven by domestic family travel, short-stay leisure breaks and repeat visitors who value the region’s accessibility from major economic hubs such as Gauteng.

The Drakensberg continues to perform strongly as a key inland destination during the Easter period.

James Seymour, chairman of the Thukela-Drakensberg Tourism Cluster, said: “Easter is one of the most important tourism periods for the Drakensberg. The occupancy level for the Central Drakensberg will be in the order of 80%. Easter is a long weekend - and the Drakensberg is easily accessible for shorter breaks for periods like long weekends - only about 5hrs from Gauteng and2,5 hours from Durban/ PMB.”

In the Midlands, sentiment remains cautiously positive. Midlands Meander Association representative Kate Kelly said businesses were actively preparing their establishments, putting in long hours, rolling out Easter promotions, enhancing facilities, collaborating locally, and extending trading hours with increased staff capacity.

Planning is streamlined through the Midlands Meander “What’s On” platform and new mobile app, which helps travellers explore local businesses and access deeper insights into the region’s natura lheritage.

Dr Vusimuzi Sibiya, CEO of South Coast Tourism and Investment Enterprise, said accommodation establishments are seeing a consistent flow of bookings, with strong momentum expected to push occupancy levels significantly higher as the long weekend approaches.

Within the hotel sector, performance remains more constrained, reflecting broader travel conditions and cost sensitivity. Samantha Croft of Southern Sun said: “The Easter period is looking very soft -across the board. We are hoping for last-minute pick up (following Ramadaan), the trend in the past is that this market only books after Eid. I do think that there is a nervousness with the fuel situation with the War in the Middle East.”

“The resort properties seem to be doing better than traditional hotels, although they are not full currently, with 65% occupancy.”

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