
GCC Eyes Major Slice Of $2 Trillion Sports Tourism Market

Gulf Cooperation Council states are positioning themselves to tap into the projected $2 trillion global sports tourism market by 2030, with a new PwC Middle East study underlining the region's evolving role from event host to year-round destination.
According to the report Game on for the GCC – Turning sporting ambition into lasting tourism impact, the region already boasts world-class events such as the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar and a string of Formula 1 races, and now aims to leverage that prestige to build sustained tourism flows.
The global sports tourism market is estimated to account for 10 percent of all tourism spending and is expected to surpass $2 trillion by 2030. GCC nations are racing to convert episodic sporting moments into immersive fan experiences, integrated visitor journeys and continuous attraction pipelines.
Saudi Arabia is emerging as the region's most aggressive investor in sport, with projections that its domestic sports economy may grow from about $8 billion to $22.4 billion by 2030-creating around 39,000 jobs and adding over $13 billion to GDP. The Kingdom's Vision 2030 reforms emphasise sports as a diversifier of its oil-dependent economy.
Across the GCC, national governments, sovereign wealth funds, private investment and public-private partnerships are converging. According to PwC's Global Sports Survey 2024, the Middle East now commands 24 percent of global sports investments, a notable shift in capital flows toward the Gulf.
To sustain momentum, the report argues, GCC states must go beyond marquee events and build a resilient sports tourism ecosystem. That means aligning infrastructure, regulation, destination branding, transport and hospitality standards-not just for big events but for ongoing seasonal and niche attractions.
See also Strong Demand Drives UAE to Issue AED1.1 B T-Sukuk in SeptemberQatar's experience is instructive. The 2022 World Cup is estimated to have generated between $2.3 billion and $4.1 billion in tourism spending and broadcast revenues, contributing $1.6 billion to $2.4 billion in GDP impact. But the challenge is to retain visitor engagement in non-World Cup years.
In that respect, the PwC analysis calls for“sport-led destinations” combining competition, culture and entertainment. The aim is to extend visitor stays, unlock repeat visitation and cross-sell other forms of tourism-heritage, wellness, sustainability and cultural experiences.
Women's sports are emerging as a key growth frontier. In the GCC, 85 percent of sports executives expect double-digit growth in women's sports revenues over the coming years. Investment in female participation, media rights and sponsorship is viewed as critical to widening the revenue base.
Yet several constraints loom. Many Gulf states rely heavily on imported talent in event operations, face seasonal desert climates, and must balance aggressive development with long-term maintenance costs. Ensuring accessibility, connectivity and visa ease are also essential for maintaining global appeal.
One forward move: GCC officials have greenlit a Schengen-style unified tourist visa scheme to allow seamless travel across member states-an effort aimed at boosting cross-border“bleisure” travel and strengthening regional integration of tourism flows.
Meanwhile, event diversification is underway. Saudi Arabia recently launched the Esports Nations Cup, with the inaugural edition slated for Riyadh in November 2026, expecting participation from over 100 nations and some 1,500 players across multiple titles. The country's wider gaming and esports strategy is aligned with broader youth, technology and cultural industry goals.
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