International Tourism in Argentina in 2025 down 20% while Argentines leaving the country up 38.6%
This reflects a wider imbalance seen over the full year 2025, when 8,775,600 international tourists arrived, a 19.7% drop from 2024, and 18,836,900 Argentine tourists departed, a 38.6% increase.
For every foreign visitor arriving in 2025, roughly two Argentines traveled abroad, underscoring a sharp “tourism deficit.”
Inbound tourism receipts totaled about $3.1 billion USD, while Argentines spent roughly $7.2 billion USD abroad, creating a hard‑currency outflow of around $4.1 billion USD for the year.
Main drivers
The strong peso and high domestic prices have made Argentina relatively expensive for foreigners, while cheaper trips abroad (especially to neighboring countries and the U.S.) have encouraged Argentines to travel overseas.
Traditional source markets such as Brazil, Chile, Uruguay, and the U.S. still dominate inbound flows, but arrivals from Europe and North America have softened, and average spending per foreign visitor has fallen in real terms.

This reflects a wider imbalance seen over the full year 2025, when 8,775,600 international tourists arrived, a 19.7% drop from 2024, and 18,836,900 Argentine tourists departed, a 38.6% increase.
For every foreign visitor arriving in 2025, roughly two Argentines traveled abroad, underscoring a sharp “tourism deficit.”
Inbound tourism receipts totaled about $3.1 billion USD, while Argentines spent roughly $7.2 billion USD abroad, creating a hard‑currency outflow of around $4.1 billion USD for the year.
Main drivers
The strong peso and high domestic prices have made Argentina relatively expensive for foreigners, while cheaper trips abroad (especially to neighboring countries and the U.S.) have encouraged Argentines to travel overseas.
Traditional source markets such as Brazil, Chile, Uruguay, and the U.S. still dominate inbound flows, but arrivals from Europe and North America have softened, and average spending per foreign visitor has fallen in real terms.
