Seatrade Cruise News is part of the Informa Markets Division of Informa PLC

This site is operated by a business or businesses owned by Informa PLC and all copyright resides with them. Informa PLC's registered office is 5 Howick Place, London SW1P 1WG. Registered in England and Wales. Number 8860726.

Australia No. 1 in the world for market growth and penetration

c685944731e4101382f150f122c5f0b6_XL
CLIA Australasia chairman Gavin Smith announced Australia now has the world's highest penetration rate
Australia is the first country to ever achieve a stronger penetration rate than the world’s largest cruise passenger source market, North America.

At the launch of CLIA Australasia’s 2013 Australian Cruise Industry Report aboard Pacific Jewel in Sydney today, chairman Gavin Smith announced that Australia achieved a penetration rate of 3.6% last year, compared to North America’s 3.3%.

Smith said a record 833,348 Australians took a cruise last year, a hike of 20% over the previous year and more than double the growth rate of any other major cruise market, including Germany and France, which grew nine per cent, the USA  which grew three per cent and the UK/Ireland at one per cent.

Smith said Australia is still a relatively young cruise market that is ‘punching well above its weight’ in the international cruise industry and said the growth on average of 20% a year for the last 11 years will continue with more ships being deployed in Australia in 2014 and 2015.

CLIA Australasia deputy chairman Ann Sherry said the goal of carrying a million passengers a year by 2020 is now likely to be achieved as early as 2015, five years earlier than the original forecast.

The South Pacific continues to be the major cruise destination, with more than 330,000 Australians cruising the region in 2013 --  40% of the market -- and 100,000 Australians cruising to New Zealand.

Asian cruising continues to rise with passenger numbers up 28% to a record 44,382 as cruise ship capacity expands.

Europe dominates long-haul destinations with 77,000 passengers -- a hike of 34%. While Mediterranean cruising remains the strongest drawcard, Northern Europe numbers rose more than 50% with close to 20,000 passengers.

River cruising numbers were up 25%, with almost 50,000 passengers.

The report also showed the number of Australians taking cruises of between eight to 14 days went from 353,342 in 2012 to 475,154 in 2013 -- a hike of almost 35%.

Australians spent an estimated 8.7m days at sea, up 22% on 2012, spending on average 10.25 days on ocean cruise ships and 14.4 days on river cruises.

New South Wales was again the leading State for passenger numbers, accounting for 41.1% of the market, followed by Queensland and Victoria.