
UK attractions still lagging behind pre-Covid visitor numbers as tourists stay away
London 's British Museum and Natural History Museum are thriving – but most UK tourist attractions are lagging well behind pre-Covid visitor numbers. That is the conclusion from analysis by The Independent of last year's numbers from the Association of Leading Visitor Attractions.
Total visitor numbers to 400 attractions are down 8.8 per cent compared with 2019 – meaning one in 11 tourists are staying away.
The English capital has a complete monopoly on the top 10 sights: all are in or very close to London.
The British Museum heads the table, with 6.48 million visitors, which is 4 per cent ahead of pre-Covid figures. The Natural History Museum drew 6.3 million visitors last year, a rise of one-sixth in five years.
In third place, Windsor Great Park at 5.67 million.
Tate Modern, the Southbank Centre, the V&A, the National Gallery, Somerset House, the Tower of London and the Science Museum complete the top 10.
The V&A South Kensington saw its busiest summer since 2018, welcoming more than one million visitors between July and September – in part thanks to the temporary Taylor Swift Songbook trail.
The director of Alva, Bernard Donoghue OBE, told The Independent travel podcast: 'We celebrate the fact that London is so popular and a must-see destination for the world. But it is a a real challenge to get people out of London.
'That's why we've been doing a lot of work with destination management organisations and local visitor economy partnerships to promote them as part of an itinerary to overseas visitors.'
Eleventh place is taken by the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh. The remainder of the top 20 are in either London or the Scottish capital, including Kew Gardens (12th) and Edinburgh Castle (15th).
Stonehenge in Wiltshire (21st) is the first non-capital attraction. Visitor numbers to the mysterious masonry circle are down 15 per cent compared with 2019.
The leading Scottish tourist attraction outside Edinburgh is the Riverside Museum in Glasgow at 24th. The transport and social history museum is doing slightly better than the average, being only 5 per cent down compared with 2019.
But Kelvingrove Art Gallery in Glasgow has slipped from 25th to 27th, with a 35 per cent slide in visitors compared with pre-Covid numbers. in previous years, exhibitions on Mary Quant and John Byrne attracted very large crowds. In 2024 the venue did not host an equivalent high-profile exhibition.
Mr Donoghue said that with 3.2 per cent year-on-year growth there was 'room for optimism'.
He said: 'If I was an economist, I'd say slow but steady growth.
'The cost of living crisis is still absolutely with us, so people are making really tactical choices very clearly about how they spend their leisure pounds and their leisure hours.
'It's financially challenging to be a visitor attraction, but the real glimmer is that people are saying, 'We're still prioritising days out, and we're still prioritising spending special time with special people in special places, and that's at visitor attractions.
'They may be sacrificing other things like takeaway meals or subscriptions to Netflix or whatever before they sacrifice day trips.'
The highest-rated attraction in Northern Ireland is Titanic Belfast, with a 10 per cent year-on-year taking it eight places higher to 35th.
Wales did not perform as well as the other three UK nations; St. Fagan's National Museum of History was the leading attraction, in 62nd place. It has lost one-fifth of its pre-Covid visitors.
The appeal of the UK to overseas tourists has been tempered by two post-Brexit policies:
The ban on Europeans with ID cards but no passports, which excludes around 300 million potential visitors.
The introduction of the electronic travel authorisation (ETA) scheme, which from 2 April will require all foreign visitors except Irish citizens to complete an online form and pay £10.
The director of Alva said: 'Not only were we saying to the world, we're quite expensive to come here because we've got VAT at 20 per cent, we've got Air Passenger Duty, we've got the looming prospect of 'bed tax' in different local authorities across the nation, and electronic travel authorisation, but we're also the only European country that doesn't have tax-free shopping as well.
'We're having robust conversations with government about our international attractiveness as a destination around the world.
'If you wanted to get an economy up and running and recovering really quickly, you'd just make yourself utterly desirable to the rest of the world as a tourism destination.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scottish Sun
an hour ago
- Scottish Sun
Our Auld Enemy rivalry will always be part of our DNA — but look to the US and Canada for the next great national drama
ZARA JANJUA Our Auld Enemy rivalry will always be part of our DNA — but look to the US and Canada for the next great national drama Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) WE Scots pride ourselves on being world-class grudge holders. For centuries, the English have been our go-to national frenemy — the original source of cultural, political and footie-based beef. But while we've been locked in this existential tug-of-war with England, another rivalry has been quietly gathering momentum across the Atlantic. 4 Scottish Sun columnist Zara Credit: The Sun 4 Our Auld Enemy rivalry with England will always be part of our DNA Credit: PA 4 Donald Trump with new Canadian PM Mark Carney Credit: AP 4 Matthew Tkachuk of Team USA fights with Brandon Hagel of Team Canada during the first period in the 4 Nations Face-Off game Credit: Getty And I hate to say it, but it might just outdo ours in both stakes and pettiness. I speak, of course, of Canada vs the United States — a feud with the energy of a polite street fight outside a farmers' market, but one that could soon eclipse our age-old Anglo-Scottish sparring. One close point from the US to Canada is the border between Detroit, Michigan (US) and Windsor, Ontario (Canada), which spans the Detroit River. This week I flew to Detroit and crossed the border by car into Windsor. On one side, muscle cars and MAGA hats; on the other, maple leaves and passive resistance. Landing in the US, I found myself wondering: Have I ever tweeted something spicy enough to be flagged by Homeland Security? I'm a liberal Pakistani-Scottish woman with a fondness for human rights and sarcasm — so, probably. I even censored myself mid-flight while chatting to the woman beside me, just in case my views got me deported before I'd even finished my pretzels. As it turned out, I sailed through immigration. But the process felt Orwellian — less Big Brother, more Big Border Patrol. It was the first time I felt that my politics, passport and profile picture might be under review by an algorithm with a grudge. Trump crushes hopes of 'peace talks' call with Musk as he insists Elon has 'lost his mind' after feud went nuclear Last week King Charles and Queen Camilla landed in Ottawa, 400 miles from Windsor — like some royal advance party sent to remind Canada they're not available for franchise. Charles was there to open Parliament and, unofficially, to stick a diplomatic elbow between Canada and Trump's vision of turning it into a Walmart with trees. Trump had recently floated the idea of Canada becoming the 51st US state — a suggestion so absurd it made The Handmaid's Tale look like a romcom. But Canadians, long stereotyped as gentle pacifists with a fetish for fleece, have started pushing back with the Elbows Up movement. Time to tan and pair up again TEN years. That's how long Love Island has been thrusting bronzed 20-somethings into a villa armed with veneers, trust issues, and bikinis smaller than their moral compasses. And somehow, despite the rise of AI lovers and Hinge horror stories, the show's stayed loyal to its original premise: couple-up or get dumped. In this economy? That's practically a marriage vow. Tomorrow, the 12th series washes ashore – and just like your ex, it'll turn up every weekday at 9pm, whether you want it to or not. But credit where it's due: in an age of ghosting, orbiting and situationships, the transactional honesty is almost refreshing. Find someone hot. Stay together. Win. If only the rest of us had a narrator explaining where we went wrong with that man from Fife who 'wasn't ready to label things'. 'Elbows Up, Canada!' is their national pep talk, a slogan born from ice hockey legend Gordie Howe, who once said: 'If a guy slashed me, I'd pull him close and elbow him in the head.' And now the nation has adopted that spirit. It features in a video campaign with new Prime Minister Mark Carney and actual national treasure Mike Myers, whose shirt: reads: 'NEVER 51.' That's the mood now — polite defiance in plaid. It's a masterclass in soft power. The Scottish-English tension may have Brexit baggage, but this? This is a full-blown cold war of the niceties. Miley is the adult now THERE are things no one prepares you for in life: pandemics, the rise of Crocs, and your dad dating Liz Hurley. But here we are – Miley Cyrus, patron saint of post-trauma empowerment, has broken her silence on her da Billy Ray's new love interest. Not a line-dancing divorcee or a country starlet, but the one and only safety-pinned icon of the Nineties. Yes, that Liz Hurley. Now, if you thought family drama peaked with Meghan and Harry, hold Miley's gluten-free beer. The former Disney rebel has navigated her parents' split, gone no-contact with Dad, and now emerged with the kind of perspective that costs thousands in therapy. 'I'm being an adult about it,' she told the New York Times, as if she's not clearly the only adult in the room. Should we have opinions on our parents' love lives? Absolutely not. Do we? Always. Especially when their new flame once dated Hugh Grant and probably owns lingerie more expensive than most mortgages. But Miley's honesty hits a nerve. That moment you realise your parents are fallible, with achy breaky hearts and questionable taste in post- divorce rebounds. It's disarming, dignified – and depressingly mature. Still, if anyone can make blended family dysfunction look glam, it's Liz bloody Hurley. And if Miley can 'wish happiness' to the chaos, maybe there's hope for the rest of us. Next year construction is due to finish on the Gordie Howe International Bridge between Detroit and Windsor, named after the elbow-throwing icon. But this isn't just infrastructure — it's metaphor. A physical link between two nations increasingly trying to figure out how to stay connected without being consumed. The old Auld Enemy rivalry will always be part of our DNA — but if you're looking for the next great national drama, look to the US and Canada. It's neighbour vs neighbour, lumber vs logic, satire vs statecraft and Mike Myres vs Trump.


Scottish Sun
2 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
I stayed a the dog-friendly cottage in the UK with welcome hampers and nearby beaches
The owners, it seems, really have thought of everything TOP DOG! I stayed a the dog-friendly cottage in the UK with welcome hampers and nearby beaches PEOPLE don't seem to just like East Ruston Cottages – or ERC as its veteran guests refer to it for short. They love it. Really love it. The one thing uniting them all? Dogs. Every one of them is a pet owner. 2 Lottie's dog Arty on the beach Credit: Lottie gross 2 Farthing Cottage is pup-friendly Credit: VRBO And like dogs with a bone, they can't seem to let go of this agency for dog-friendly cottages in coastal and rural Norfolk. They don't just come once. Or twice. Some have booked upward of 30 times over the last decade. So, what makes these cottages so special? Well, after I check in for a few days at the four-person Farthing Cottage, in the village of Trunch, between the coast and Norfolk Broads, it's easy to see. The semi-detached, flint-stone cottage, set back from a quiet residential road, is a delight. Beer festival There are paw-print stickers padding across the patio doors inviting my Manchester Terrier, Arty, out into the fully enclosed garden. There's also a welcome hamper with treats for humans as well as a mini-hamper for the dog, with Norfolk-made dog treats, a collapsible bowl, a clip-on light for visibility in the dark and a poo-bag holder. The shelf in the hallway has a tin of dog treats and a jar full of dog tags with the cottage address on one side and a 'I'm on holiday' notice on the other. And on the hooks by the front door, there's even a bag with 'I need space' lead labels to borrow from Yellow Dog UK, made for anxious or reactive dogs that don't want to be approached by others when roaming the local footpaths. The owners, it seems, really have thought of everything, and to my delight they've not left a list of rules my dog must follow. We spend our days roaming on the local dog-friendly beaches at Mundesley and Trimingham, and evenings curled up on the sofas with the fire blazing. Inside luxury dog-friendly glamping pod with wild Scottish spa and its own fairy pools The local social club (also dog-friendly) has a beer festival on, so I drink local ales and listen to live music before retiring to the cottage, where Arty is allowed to snooze on the bed with me, just as he does at home. If you are stuck for things to do in the local area, this can be quickly remedied with a visit to the ERC Facebook page. Regular visitors lurk on the company's Facebook group, which has a bewildering 6,000 members, ready to pounce with recommendations of nearby pubs, beaches or fish and chip shops. After years of staying at dog-friendly accommodation and writing dog-friendly guidebooks, few places can match up to the efforts made by East Ruston Cottages. I'm no longer surprised by the fact that the company's most popular properties, such as The Lookout which has a sea view, are booked right through until 2026 in some cases. And while I'm not about to join the congregation of impassioned Facebook followers, I will no doubt be returning for more.


Scottish Sun
5 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
I ditched the UK to live on a cheap island with my kids – I was sick of splashing cash on nursery fees and bills
Scroll down for tips to make moving house easier EXPAT ESCAPE I ditched the UK to live on a cheap island with my kids – I was sick of splashing cash on nursery fees and bills Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A MUM has shared how she ditched the UK for sunny Thailand with her kids and husband. Lauren took to social media and shared why she left England and has no regrets in uprooting her family to South East Asia. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 3 Lauren left the UK and swapped it for sunny Thailand Credit: 3 Now they spend their days island hopping and relaxing by the beach Credit: The mum-of-two revealed that she and her family decided the cost of living and their busy schedule was too much. Instead of putting up with it, they sold their house and bought a one-way ticket to Thailand for a new life. She said: "We didn't leave because we hated the UK. "We left because life started to feel like one long checklist we didn't remember choosing. Wake up. Rush. Work. Nursery. School. Bills. Repeat. "We wanted more presence, more connection, more sunsets and slow mornings. "So we sold almost everything, booked a one-way ticket, and figured it out as we went. "It's not perfect, but it's ours, and we've never felt more free." Lauren often shared her new life in Thailand on social media and recently shared one of their favourite breakfasts while they stayed in Koh Samui. She headed to one of her favourite food vendors and ordered fried chicken and sticky rice before getting some Thai milk tea. The mum even said that she thought the iced tea was better than English Breakfast tea. 3 The stunning island is perfect for families Credit: Alamy Gobsmacked shoppers watch on as hungry elephant raids Thai store and leaves with trunk full of snacks The mum added: "Hands down they are better than an English breakfast tea. They're sweet, they're icy. They do give you that little tea fix." She said the next step to the perfect breakfast was to locate the nearest beach. "The beach closest to our house here is Chong Mon. And if you are coming to Koh Samui, even just on holiday, I really recommend this area," Lauren said. "It's kind of like a mix between touristy but not too touristy. Moving house hacks 1. Declutter Before You Pack Sort through your belongings and get rid of anything you no longer need. Donate, sell, or recycle items to lighten your load. 2. Create an Inventory Make a list of all your items. This helps keep track of everything and ensures nothing gets lost in the move. 3. Use Quality Packing Materials Invest in sturdy boxes, bubble wrap, and packing tape. This will protect your belongings during the move. 4. Label Everything Clearly label each box with its contents and the room it belongs to. This makes unpacking much easier and more organized. 5. Pack a 'First Day' Box Include essentials like toiletries, a change of clothes, snacks, and important documents. This will keep you from rummaging through boxes on your first day. 6. Take Photos of Electronics Setup Before unplugging your electronics, take photos of the wiring setup. This will make it easier to reconnect everything at your new place. 7. Use Suitcases for Heavy Items Pack books and other heavy items in rolling suitcases. This makes them easier to transport and reduces the risk of injury. 8. Colour-Code Your Boxes Use different coloured stickers or markers for each room. This will help movers quickly identify where each box should go in your new home. "The beach here is so good for kids because the water is really shallow." Finally, she and her family sat down on the beach to enjoy their breakfast with a stunning view. The clip went viral on her TikTok account @lifealongsidelauren with 120k views. People were quick to take to the comments in awe of Lauren's new life. One person wrote: "Living the dream, I would swap my builders' tea in England for yours any day of the week." Another commented: 'I have been following for a while just wanted to say that because of you and your TikTok my future with my kids will look the same!" "I haven't seen your posts for ages, glad you're still enjoying your new life," penned a third. Meanwhile a fourth said: "Brekkie on the "Love watching your adventures! We are coming to to Thailand in August and can't wait,' claimed a fifth. Someone else added: 'Such an inspiration."