With growing disposable income, middle class is embracing cruise: Sarbananda Sonowal
India's cruise tourism is experiencing a significant boom, with passenger numbers surging nearly 500% in the last 11 years. This growth is fueled by rising disposable incomes and a desire for premium travel. The government is actively supporting t...
How realistic is the government’s target of doubling the number of cruise passengers from about half a million now to 1 million by 2029?
In 2013-14, the number of sea cruise passengers was only 84,000, which increased to about 500,000 in the last financial year. This shows a growth of almost 500% in just 11 years, also reflecting on the future growth potential in the sector. In FY2024-25, 93 international cruise vessels called at Indian ports. This huge growth has happened due to the concerted efforts of the government to provide a very good cruise tourism ecosystem in the country by bringing about changes in the policy that was dormant for decades, providing financial and tax incentives, adopting international best practices, creating cruise infrastructure, including world-class cruise terminals, and various other cruise-tourism friendly measures.
Have you noticed the trend of more upper middle-class Indians experiencing cruise tourism now?
Cruise tourism is gaining strong traction among India’s upper middle class segment. Growing disposable income at the hand of a burgeoning middle and upper middle class is enabling them to increasingly embrace cruise as a preferred leisure choice. This surge is driven by rising disposable incomes, growing aspirations for premium travel experiences and increased awareness of cruise holidays. The Maritime India Vision 2030 projects an eightfold expansion of the Indian cruise market by 2030, citing increasing demand from the middle and upper middle classes.
But does India have enough new-age cruise terminals?
Why are many cruise liners still hesitant to make Indian ports their home ports?
The phenomenal growth of India’s cruise sector is supported both by domestic and international ship calls. At present, Delhi-based Waterways Leisure Tourism Ltd has homeported one ship. Homeporting is a strategic decision of cruise liners, but our government has been proactively working on numerous aspects to make India a preferable destination.
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