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Paraguay, The In-Between Country, Just Turned Transit Into A Tourism Boom
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
Paraguay spent years as South America's“in-between” country, crossed more than chosen. In 2025, it began to look like a destination in its own right.
Official migration data compiled by the National Tourism Secretariat, Senatur, show 3,657,194 international visitors entered last year. It is the highest total recorded since at least 2015.
That surge was not only about hotels and vacations. Senatur's breakdown shows two different visitor economies moving at once.
It counted 2,029,678 tourists, a category usually linked to overnight stays, and 1,627,516 excursionists. Excursionists tend to come and go the same day.
The excursionist segment grew 39%, suggesting Paraguay is pulling in more short, high-frequency trips that support retail, food, and services.
The flow is overwhelmingly regional. Argentina accounted for 79.98% of arrivals, followed by Brazil at 10.14%. The United States made up 1.09%, with other countries and regions at about 9%.
For policymakers, that mix matters. It ties tourism to border logistics, currency dynamics, and practical improvements in safety, signage, and payments.
Money is the second headline. Senatur estimates tourism generated about $1.422 billion in 2025, nearly doubling the scale seen a year earlier.
In 2024, Paraguay reported more than 2.2 million international visitors and about $766 million in tourism income. The stated beneficiaries include hospitality, restaurants, and crafts. The broader impact is jobs and small business cash flow.
Air connectivity adds another layer. Paraguay's civil aviation authority, Dinac, reported 1,327,342 airport passengers in 2025, surpassing the pre-pandemic record set in 2019.
Officials linked the jump to route recovery and stronger demand. Reporting has described pressure to expand capacity at the main airport.
This story is easy to misread as a simple rebound. The data point to something more structural: Paraguay is monetizing mobility, not just counting it.
Paraguay logged 3.66 million international visitors in 2025, a 91.24% jump, driven mainly by neighbors.
Authorities estimate $1.422 billion in tourism receipts, with day-trippers rising fast alongside overnight stays.
Air travel also hit a record, supporting higher-spend segments and strengthening Paraguay's connectivity story.
Paraguay spent years as South America's“in-between” country, crossed more than chosen. In 2025, it began to look like a destination in its own right.
Official migration data compiled by the National Tourism Secretariat, Senatur, show 3,657,194 international visitors entered last year. It is the highest total recorded since at least 2015.
That surge was not only about hotels and vacations. Senatur's breakdown shows two different visitor economies moving at once.
It counted 2,029,678 tourists, a category usually linked to overnight stays, and 1,627,516 excursionists. Excursionists tend to come and go the same day.
The excursionist segment grew 39%, suggesting Paraguay is pulling in more short, high-frequency trips that support retail, food, and services.
The flow is overwhelmingly regional. Argentina accounted for 79.98% of arrivals, followed by Brazil at 10.14%. The United States made up 1.09%, with other countries and regions at about 9%.
For policymakers, that mix matters. It ties tourism to border logistics, currency dynamics, and practical improvements in safety, signage, and payments.
Money is the second headline. Senatur estimates tourism generated about $1.422 billion in 2025, nearly doubling the scale seen a year earlier.
In 2024, Paraguay reported more than 2.2 million international visitors and about $766 million in tourism income. The stated beneficiaries include hospitality, restaurants, and crafts. The broader impact is jobs and small business cash flow.
Air connectivity adds another layer. Paraguay's civil aviation authority, Dinac, reported 1,327,342 airport passengers in 2025, surpassing the pre-pandemic record set in 2019.
Officials linked the jump to route recovery and stronger demand. Reporting has described pressure to expand capacity at the main airport.
This story is easy to misread as a simple rebound. The data point to something more structural: Paraguay is monetizing mobility, not just counting it.
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