The boutique travel event, held at the Norval Foundation in Cape Town, recorded a 37 percent increase in attendance compared to 2025, with 87 percent of buyers attending for the first time, drawn from 32 countries. Appointments increased by 29 percent year-on-year, reflecting a surge in commercial intent from luxury buyers actively seeking African experiences.
The results are striking given the broader context of global uncertainty. According to the newly released State of African Tourism 2026 report, the continent is successfully ‘selling certainty in an anxious world.’ Because high-end safaris and luxury itineraries are typically booked 12 to 18 months in advance, and demand for established destinations remains resolute, the region’s tourism industry is not expected to be materially affected by ongoing disruptions in the Middle East. Instead, discerning luxury travellers are increasingly looking to Africa not as an alternative, but as a trusted destination of first choice.
Africa's hotel development pipeline tells its own story: with 55 percent of the entire continental pipeline currently under construction, investor confidence in African luxury hospitality is at an historic high. The infrastructure is being built, and ILTM Africa's record buyer numbers suggest the demand is ready to meet it.
The 87 percent new buyer figure is perhaps the most telling statistic of all. As the State of African Tourism report highlights, the post-pandemic ‘revenge travel’ wave has crashed, replaced by a more informed, discerning traveller for whom trust is the new currency. This influx of new buyers suggests that ILTM Africa is actively converting these new markets, translating directly into fresh commercial pipelines and relationships for exhibitors that did not exist 12 months ago.
Carol Weaving, managing director, RX Africa, the organiser behind ILTM Africa, noted, “The travel sector has always been a people industry selling high-value, high-stakes experiences. Africa Travel Week has evolved into a powerful in-person event where technology handles the heavy lifting, and humans focus on the relationship building that defines this industry.”