Fri, 22 May 2026 · LIVE
Updated May 22, 2026 · 17:05
India News Updated May 22, 2026

PM Modi’s Domestic Tourism Push to Boost Forex, Hotel Investment: HAI

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s call for domestic tourism is seen as a major economic opportunity by the Hotel Association of India. The industry body says it could boost foreign exchange earnings by 25-30% and trigger investments in hotels, resorts, and infrastructure. India’s stability, cultural diversity, and improving infrastructure make it attractive to international travellers. Faster approvals and predictable regulations are needed to unlock the sector’s full potential under Vision 2047.

PM Modi's tourism push seen boosting forex, hotel investment: HAI

Thiruvananthapuram, May 22

Prime Minister Narendra Modi's call urging Indians to increasingly choose destinations within the country for leisure travel, conferences, weddings and events has opened up a major economic opportunity for India's tourism and hospitality sectors, according to the Hotel Association of India.

The industry body said the Prime Minister's push for domestic tourism comes at a crucial time when geopolitical instability, slowing global growth and changing travel patterns are reshaping the international tourism market.

India, it said, is well positioned to emerge as one of the world's preferred destinations for leisure, business, medical and spiritual tourism while also strengthening its foreign exchange reserves through higher inbound travel.

According to the HAI, the initiative goes beyond encouraging Indians to holiday within the country.

It could trigger major investments in hotels, resorts, convention centres, wellness retreats and tourism infrastructure, generating employment and economic activity across urban and rural India.

"Inbound tourism will play a decisive role in the growth of India's hospitality sector in the coming years," said K.B. Kachru, President of the Hotel Association of India and Chairman-South Asia of Radisson Hotel Group.

"India has the opportunity to position itself as a globally competitive tourism destination with world-class infrastructure and experiences," he added.

The HAI noted that India's image as a stable democracy with cultural diversity and improving infrastructure is increasingly appealing to international travellers seeking safe and experience-driven destinations amid global uncertainty.

It said stronger inbound tourism could substantially raise India's foreign exchange earnings through spending on hotels, food and beverages, healthcare, transport, retail and entertainment.

The industry body estimated that sustained tourism growth could increase tourism-linked foreign exchange earnings by 25 to 30 per cent over the coming years.

The association also expects rising domestic tourism demand to accelerate investment in mid-market, premium and luxury hotels, cruises, heritage destinations, religious tourism circuits and MICE infrastructure.

Industry leaders believe this could attract long-term foreign capital, global expertise and technology partnerships into India's hospitality sector.

Kachru said foreign investment in hospitality would generate wider benefits across construction, logistics, technology and supply chains while creating sustainable jobs.

The HAI stressed that faster approvals, predictable regulations and targeted incentives would be crucial for unlocking the sector's full growth potential under India's 'Vision 2047' roadmap.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

Honestly, this sounds promising for hotel investors, but what about the common tourist? Prices at decent hotels have shot up. Also, we need better cleanliness and safety for women travellers. Without that, no amount of 'push' will work. Hope these basics are addressed.

Vikram M

I love that the article mentions religious tourism circuits. Places like Varanasi, Tirupati, and Rameswaram have so much potential. My family did a yatra last year and the experience was transformative. However, Infrastructure at these sites still lags behind—more clean toilets and better signage would help!

James A

Interesting perspective. As someone living abroad, I've seen how tourism can transform economies. India's diversity is unmatched—wildlife, heritage, spirituality, even medical tourism. But regulatory hurdles and visa processes still discourage many international visitors. Streamlining these could make a massive difference. 🇮🇳

Meera T

I'm all for boosting local economies, but tourism can't be just about luxury hotels. What about homestays and community-run experiences? That's where real India lives. Also, ecotourism needs serious regulation—our fragile ecosystems can't handle unchecked development. Let's be responsible. 🌿

Rohit P

Finally, a focus on making India a global tourism destination! We have the culture, the food, the history. The only thing missing is world-class service standards. If hotels and resorts can train staff better and offer consistent quality, we can definitely compete with Thailand or Dubai. Big opportunity here!

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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