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Egypt’s Tourism Billions: Why Arrivals Are the Wrong Number to Watch

Egypt’s tourism engine is running at record pace, 9 million visitors in the first half of 2026, occupancies above 90% across the Red Sea, North Coast, and Cairo, and strong demand returning from European and GCC markets.

But Remon Naguib, Chief Investment Officer at Orient Hospitality Group, has a sharper point. A 20 to 25% revenue leakage through OTAs and operator commissions is the structural reality of the business. The path to real returns, for investors and for Egypt’s hard currency reserves, runs through five-star product development, higher average rates, and entertainment infrastructure that is almost entirely missing today.

On the road to 30 million visitors by 2030, investor confidence has returned on the back of two years of currency stability. Land costs are rising and international financing remains patchy in some areas, but hotel apartments, tax incentives, and a more active government are helping close the gap.

His closing argument: Egypt needs to stop measuring success in arrivals and start measuring it in revenue per visitor. That is where the real opportunity is.

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