Montana Tourism Hits Records, Fuels Economy Despite Shifts
Montana shattered tourism records in 2024 with 13.79 million nonresident visitors, a 9% jump from 2023 and the highest ever, according to the University of Montana’s Institute for Tourism and Recreation Research (ITRR). Spending reached $4.93 billion despite an 8% decline from prior peaks, directly fueling $3.9 billion in local economic activity, 38,240 jobs and $308 million in state and local taxes—lowering the average household tax burden by $680. Bozeman Yellowstone International Airport led arrivals with 753,000 visitors, followed by Glacier Park International (369,000) and Missoula (301,000).
Visitor profiles evolved in 2025, with numbers dipping 3.6% to 13.8 million but spending soaring 12% to $5.6 billion, driven by older, richer tourists. The most common age shifted from 60-65 in 2019 to 65-69, and 55% reported over $100,000 annual income versus 43% pre-pandemic. Glacier County topped spending at $1.7 billion annually, with Yellowstone County at $1.3 billion; transportation and food/drink claimed over half of expenditures.
Regional trends varied, with Glacier Country's visitation down 5.5% through November 2025, out-of-state by 3% and spending by 1.8%, though Glacier National Park held steady. International visitors added $364 million in 2024, led by Canadians (8% of total) but with overseas travelers (2%) spending over half at $193.4 million. New flights like United Airlines' daily Billings-Chicago seasonal route through October aim to sustain momentum.
Related Topics
Article Ratings
0 ratings submitted
How do you feel about this story?
National Desk
Sign in to follow this author from their profile.


Discussion (0)
Join the Conversation
No comments yet. Be the first to comment!