Key Takeaways
- Oxford Economics projects the conflict will erase between US$34 billion and US$56 billion in Middle East visitor spending in 2026
- Petra’s visitor numbers collapsed 61% in 2024 – from 1.17 million to 457,215 – forcing 32 hotel closures and 700 job losses
- The Middle East was the world’s strongest tourism recovery story, sitting 39% above 2019 levels by 2025 – making the timing of this crisis particularly brutal
By the first week of March 2026, Jordan’s high season had collapsed before it began. Tour groups booked months in advance cancelled en masse. The bookings that define the industry’s most profitable window – Petra at dawn, Wadi Rum at sunset – were simply gone. The country was far from the fighting. Its infrastructure was intact, its borders open. But for the international traveller scanning a map of the Middle East with one eye on the news, geography had made that distinction irrelevant.
Three thousand kilometres away, a different response was taking shape. Dubai’s Department of Economy and Tourism activated crisis protocols refined during the pandemic. Hotel groups across the UAE locked in room rates, extended stays for stranded guests and pivoted to sustain resident spending. Mandatory stay extensions were ordered by tourism authorities in Dubai and Abu Dhabi. One crisis. Two hospitality industries responding in fundamentally different ways.
When the same war hits differently
The divergence between Gulf and non-Gulf markets predates the February 2026 escalation. A World Bank analysis published in March 2025 described the emergence of “two MENAs” – a structural split in which the effects of regional instability were falling disproportionately on non-GCC economies while Gulf states maintained positive growth, albeit at a slower pace.
The 2024 data makes the divergence tangible. Egypt, whose flagship attractions sit well clear of conflict corridors, saw tourism receipts grow from US$14 billion to US$14.7 billion. Jordan’s experience was sharply different. Petra, the country’s most economically significant tourism asset, recorded 457,215 visitors in 2024 against 1.17 million in 2023 – a 61% decline confirmed by the Petra Development and Tourism Region Authority. That collapse forced the closure of 32 hotels and the loss of 700 jobs, according to PDTRA Chairman Fares Braizat’s formal testimony to Jordan’s parliament in February 2026.
The mechanism is well documented in the research: travellers assess risk by proximity, not political geography. Jordan shares no border with any active conflict zone. But on a map – or in a travel advisory – it sits unambiguously in the same region. That perception has proved commercially devastating.
Playing defence in real time
The February 28 escalation hit the Gulf at a particularly painful moment. Dubai had welcomed a record 19.6 million international overnight visitors in 2025. Dubai International Airport had reported 95.2 million passengers for the year – the highest annual international passenger traffic ever recorded by any airport globally, according to Dubai Airports’ official February 2026 release – and had projected 99.5 million for 2026. Within days of the strikes, more than 80,000 short-term rental bookings in Dubai had been cancelled, according to data group AirDNA. The World Travel & Tourism Council warned that daily losses to the region’s tourism sector could reach US$600 million.
The industry’s response was coordinated and deliberately human-first. Hotels across the UAE scrapped flexible pricing in favour of locked-in rates to prevent exploitation of stranded travellers. Authorities in Dubai and Abu Dhabi directed operators to grant stay extensions and work with immigration services on visa flexibility. Staycation campaigns activated resident spending as a bridge while international demand remained suspended. The logic was consistent across operators: protect long-term reputation over short-term yield at precisely the moment both were under pressure.
A region built on connective tissue
The structural vulnerability exposed by this crisis extends well beyond individual markets. Oxford Economics modelled two scenarios in a report published this month: an early resolution resulting in a loss of 23 million visitors and US$34 billion in spending, and a prolonged conflict producing losses of 38 million visitors and US$56 billion. Central to both is the Middle East’s role as the world’s transit architecture – its airports account for approximately 14% of international transit activity globally. When that network fractures, the damage radiates far beyond the conflict zone.
Yet the historical record argues for measured confidence. The Middle East was the only region globally to exceed its pre-pandemic visitor numbers by 2023, according to UN Tourism data, and had reached 39% above 2019 levels by 2025 – the strongest recovery performance of any region in the world. The capacity to rebuild is not rhetorical; it is repeatedly evidenced.
The question the coming months will answer is whether the response mechanisms deployed this year – the rate-locking, the stay extensions, the pivot to domestic demand – are being embedded into long-term resilience frameworks, or whether they remain reactive measures assembled under pressure. For operators, investors and policymakers overseeing multi-decade development pipelines, that distinction matters well beyond this crisis.

