Caribbean Travel Marketplace 2026 confirmed Antigua and Barbuda as one of the Caribbean’s leading tourism, aviation, cruise and investment hubs. Hosted for the second consecutive year in St John’s by the Caribbean Hotel and Tourism Association (CHTA), the event brought together global travel buyers, tour operators, airlines, hoteliers, investors and international media during Antigua and Barbuda Culinary Month.
The conference highlighted strong visitor growth, major infrastructure expansion and a strategic focus on sustainable tourism development across both Antigua and Barbuda. The latest tourism figures presented during Caribbean Travel Marketplace 2026 demonstrated significant momentum for the twin-island nation, with stay-over arrivals increasing by 6.7 percent during the first quarter of 2026 and cruise projections rising sharply above pre-pandemic levels.
New airline routes, expanded airport infrastructure and large-scale hotel developments also reinforced the destination’s long-term tourism ambitions. The event carried wider regional importance because Caribbean Travel Marketplace remains the Caribbean’s premier tourism trade forum, connecting buyers and suppliers across more than 30 destinations.
Antigua and Barbuda used the occasion to present itself not only as a leisure destination, but also as a meeting, conferences and investment centre ahead of the 2026 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM).
Key Takeaways
- Caribbean Travel Marketplace 2026 strengthened Antigua and Barbuda’s global tourism profile.
- Antigua and Barbuda recorded strong tourism growth in early 2026.
- Major cruise, aviation and hotel investments are reshaping the destination.
- Sustainability and community participation remain central to tourism policy.
- CHOGM 2026 will further expand Antigua and Barbuda’s international visibility.
Caribbean Travel Marketplace remains the Caribbean tourism industry’s flagship business event
The recently concluded Caribbean Travel Marketplace 2026 represented far more than another tourism conference. Hosted by the Caribbean Hotel and Tourism Association in Antigua and Barbuda, the annual event continues to serve as the Caribbean tourism industry’s primary commercial marketplace for business negotiations, destination promotion and strategic networking.
For decades, Caribbean Travel Marketplace has functioned as the meeting point where international tour operators, travel advisors, airlines and tourism suppliers negotiate future travel programmes across the region. Its economic significance extends well beyond the conference floor because agreements and partnerships formed during the event directly influence future visitor arrivals, airline scheduling, hotel occupancy and cruise deployment throughout the Caribbean.
By hosting the event for a second consecutive year, Antigua and Barbuda achieved something strategically important. Repeated hosting rights demonstrated regional confidence in the destination’s infrastructure, organisational capability and tourism product. It also provided the country with sustained international visibility at a time when global tourism competition continues to intensify.
The timing of Caribbean Travel Marketplace 2026 during Antigua and Barbuda Culinary Month added another layer of destination marketing sophistication. Delegates and media were exposed not only to hotels and beaches, but also to local gastronomy, cultural experiences, heritage attractions and community tourism initiatives. This integrated approach reflects broader global travel trends where visitors increasingly seek authentic and immersive experiences rather than standard resort-only vacations.
Strong tourism growth signals confidence in Antigua and Barbuda
One of the most important announcements made during Caribbean Travel Marketplace 2026 involved the destination’s impressive tourism performance during the first quarter of the year. Speaking at the event, Charles H Fernández and Colin C James revealed that Antigua and Barbuda recorded 110,832 stay-over arrivals between January and March 2026.
That figure represented a 6.7 percent increase over the same period in 2025 and confirmed a pattern of sustained tourism recovery and expansion. The data showed consistent monthly growth, with January arrivals increasing by 5 percent, February by 6 percent and March by an even stronger 8 percent.
These figures carry major significance within the wider Caribbean tourism landscape. Many destinations across the world continue to face fluctuating demand patterns linked to economic uncertainty, airline capacity challenges and shifting consumer travel preferences. Antigua and Barbuda’s growth therefore signals strong market confidence in the destination’s product, accessibility and overall reputation.
The United Kingdom emerged as the strongest-performing source market with a 14 percent year-over-year increase during the quarter. This reinforces the enduring relationship between the UK and Antigua and Barbuda, which has historically remained one of the Caribbean’s strongest British tourism markets. The United States nevertheless maintained its position as the largest single source market, accounting for 46 percent of all stay-over arrivals.
European travellers represented 34 percent of arrivals, followed by Canada at 12 percent. Smaller but strategically important contributions came from the Caribbean region itself, Latin America and other international markets.
What makes these numbers particularly important is the government’s simultaneous effort to diversify visitor origins. Antigua and Barbuda is actively targeting Latin America and Africa as emerging tourism growth corridors. This reflects a broader strategic understanding that future tourism resilience depends on diversified markets rather than overreliance on a small number of traditional source countries.
Cruise tourism expansion reshapes the visitor economy
Cruise tourism emerged as another central theme during Caribbean Travel Marketplace 2026. Antigua and Barbuda announced projections showing cruise arrivals reaching approximately 894,469 visitors during 2026, representing a 21.9 percent increase compared to 2019 levels.
This projected expansion illustrates how cruise tourism has evolved from a supplementary tourism segment into one of the Caribbean’s most powerful economic drivers. Cruise passenger spending supports restaurants, transport providers, retail businesses, tour operators, cultural performers and small entrepreneurs throughout the destination.
The increase in cruise ship calls from 388 to 483 further demonstrates Antigua and Barbuda’s growing importance within regional cruise itineraries. Expanded home-porting activity is especially significant because home-port operations generate greater economic value than transit calls. Passengers embarking or disembarking typically require hotel accommodation, airport transfers, dining and extended pre- or post-cruise stays.
To support this growth, Antigua and Barbuda recently opened a new US$30 million cruise terminal as part of the wider Upland Development Project. Officially launched on January 24, 2026, the modern facility was designed to improve visitor arrivals, expand passenger handling capacity and strengthen the country’s competitiveness within the Caribbean cruise sector.
The project reflects a broader regional reality. Caribbean destinations increasingly understand that tourism infrastructure must evolve rapidly to accommodate larger cruise vessels, higher passenger volumes and modern traveller expectations. Ports now function not only as transportation facilities, but also as destination showcases that shape first impressions.

Aviation connectivity continues to expand
Caribbean Travel Marketplace 2026 also highlighted major developments in air connectivity. In tourism economics, aviation access remains one of the most decisive factors influencing destination competitiveness. Without reliable and diversified airlift, tourism growth becomes difficult to sustain regardless of marketing strength or natural beauty.
Antigua and Barbuda announced several new routes during the event. Sunrise Airways launched twice-weekly service between Antigua and the Dominican Republic on May 1, strengthening regional Caribbean connectivity and potentially opening new multi-destination tourism opportunities.
Liat Air introduced twice-weekly flights to Guadeloupe on May 8, improving inter-island travel and regional integration within the Eastern Caribbean.
Perhaps the most strategically significant announcement involved Air Peace, which is preparing to launch a twice-monthly Antigua to Lagos route via Barbados beginning May 25. This route carries major long-term implications because it strengthens links between the Caribbean and West Africa, opening possibilities for tourism, diaspora travel, trade and cultural exchange.
The growing emphasis on African connectivity aligns closely with Antigua and Barbuda’s strategy to diversify source markets. It also reflects broader geopolitical and cultural trends as Caribbean nations increasingly seek stronger economic and historical connections with Africa.
Infrastructure upgrades are supporting these aviation ambitions. Expansion and rehabilitation works at V.C. Bird International Airport are already underway, ensuring the destination can accommodate future passenger growth and larger aircraft operations.
Meanwhile, the newly opened Burton-Nibbs International Airport on Barbuda represents a significant development for the smaller sister island’s tourism future. Purpose-built to support eco-luxury tourism, the airport positions Barbuda for carefully managed upscale development while improving accessibility.
Luxury investment continues across Antigua and Barbuda
Another dominant theme at Caribbean Travel Marketplace 2026 involved continued investment in hotels and resort infrastructure. Antigua and Barbuda is experiencing a significant wave of tourism-related development aimed at strengthening its position within the premium Caribbean travel market.
Among the most anticipated openings is the Moon Gate Hotel & Spa, expected to launch during 2026 with 71 suites and seven two-bedroom villas spread across nine buildings. The project reflects growing demand for boutique luxury properties offering privacy, wellness and experiential travel.
On Barbuda, the Nobu Beach Inn continues construction with completion expected later in 2026. The association with the globally recognised Nobu brand immediately elevates Barbuda’s profile within international luxury travel circles.
Further ahead, the planned Nikki Beach Resort and Spa aims for a 2029 opening with 84 hotel rooms and 127 luxury residences. The Rosewood Hotel Barbuda project is scheduled for 2028 and will include 50 resort suites and 35 residences. A Marriott Leisure World Hotel featuring overwater villas is also under development.
These projects collectively indicate growing investor confidence in Antigua and Barbuda’s long-term tourism prospects. They also demonstrate how Caribbean tourism continues evolving toward higher-value visitor segments rather than pure volume-driven growth.
Luxury tourism carries important economic advantages when managed properly. High-spending visitors often generate stronger revenue yields while placing comparatively lower strain on infrastructure than mass tourism models. However, balancing luxury development with environmental protection and local participation remains essential for long-term sustainability.
CHOGM 2026 will elevate Antigua and Barbuda’s global profile
The momentum surrounding Caribbean Travel Marketplace 2026 arrives only months before Antigua and Barbuda hosts another major international event: the 28th Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting.
Scheduled for November 1 to 4 under the theme “Accelerating Partnerships and Investment for a Prosperous Commonwealth,” the summit is expected to attract between 3,000 and 5,000 delegates, participants and media representatives.
The importance of CHOGM extends beyond diplomacy. Major international conferences generate substantial tourism, hospitality and media exposure benefits. They also provide host nations with opportunities to demonstrate governance capacity, infrastructure readiness and cultural identity before global audiences.
Antigua and Barbuda will additionally become the first CHOGM host nation to integrate a concert and cricket tournament into the official programme. This innovative approach reflects the country’s confidence in combining diplomacy, culture and tourism promotion into a unified national showcase.
The destination’s recent recognition as the “Caribbean’s Best Meetings and Conference Destination” by the World Travel Awards reinforces its growing status within the meetings, incentives, conferences and exhibitions sector.
Sustainability remains central to the tourism strategy
Despite strong growth projections and large-scale development, Antigua and Barbuda repeatedly emphasised sustainability throughout Caribbean Travel Marketplace 2026. This focus reflects an increasingly important reality within global tourism: destinations that fail to protect environmental and cultural assets ultimately undermine their own long-term competitiveness.
The government highlighted several conservation initiatives, including the Redonda island restoration project, reef protection measures and anti-overfishing oversight programmes. Authorities also stressed the importance of expanding local community participation within tourism development.
These policies matter because modern travellers increasingly prioritise destinations demonstrating environmental responsibility and authentic local engagement. Sustainable tourism has shifted from a niche marketing concept into a mainstream competitive requirement.
Barbuda’s positioning as an eco-luxury destination illustrates this balancing act. The island’s untouched beaches, fragile ecosystems and low-density character form part of its international appeal. Future development therefore depends heavily on careful environmental stewardship.
Antigua and Barbuda strengthens its position within a changing tourism landscape
Caribbean Travel Marketplace 2026 ultimately demonstrated how Antigua and Barbuda has positioned itself at the intersection of several powerful tourism trends shaping the future of Caribbean travel.
The destination combines strong traditional leisure tourism with expanding cruise operations, upgraded aviation connectivity, luxury investment, conference tourism and sustainability initiatives. At the same time, it continues promoting the Caribbean’s broader reputation as a safe, welcoming and politically stable region.
In an era where travellers increasingly value security, accessibility and authentic experiences, Antigua and Barbuda appears well placed to capitalise on changing global travel preferences. The twin-island nation’s combination of natural beauty, hospitality, infrastructure investment and international connectivity creates a strong foundation for sustained tourism growth.
For the wider Caribbean, Caribbean Travel Marketplace 2026 reinforced the continuing importance of regional collaboration and strategic tourism planning. The event highlighted how Caribbean nations compete globally not only through beaches and resorts, but also through innovation, sustainability, connectivity and cultural identity.
As delegates departed Antigua following the conclusion of Caribbean Travel Marketplace 2026, the broader message was clear. Antigua and Barbuda is no longer simply participating in Caribbean tourism growth. It is actively helping shape the future direction of the region’s tourism industry itself.
Find information on Antigua and Barbuda at: www.visitantiguabarbuda.com
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