Lebanon Tourism Hangs on Ceasefire as Operators Race to Save Summer

Lebanon's tourism operators are reportedly facing a narrow window to rescue the 2026 summer season. Industry players say a partial recovery remains possible if the ceasefire holds and Beirut airport stays open, though bookings are still running well below 2023 levels.

Lebanese tourism operators say they have a narrow window to rescue the 2026 summer season, according to a report from EnterpriseAM published on May 4. Hotels, restaurants, and tour businesses are holding on, but they reportedly need two conditions to fall their way before the season slips out of reach. The first is a stable ceasefire. The second is keeping Beirut's Rafic Hariri International Airport fully open through the summer months. Both are reportedly viewed by operators as non-negotiable for any meaningful recovery. Bookings Lag 2023 Levels Reservations for the coming months are reportedly running well below the 2023 baseline, the last summer before the conflict in the south disrupted the sector. Industry voices cited in the report say the backlog of cancellations and the late timing of any rebound make a full recovery unlikely, but a partial season is still in reach. The window is short. Decisions on summer trips, expat visits, and regional travel typically firm up by late spring. Operators are reportedly trying to capture demand from Lebanese expatriates and Gulf travelers who have been waiting on a clearer security picture. Why the Airport Matters Beirut's airport is the entry point for the vast majority of inbound tourists. Any disruption to flight schedules, insurance terms, or carrier coverage can collapse demand within days, as the sector saw during earlier escalations. Industry operators are reportedly pushing for clarity from carriers and from the Ministry of Public Works and Transport on flight stability through the summer. Without that visibility, last-minute booking patterns will not deliver enough volume to offset the slow start. The Stakes for the Wider Economy Tourism is one of the few sectors that has consistently brought fresh foreign currency into Lebanon during the financial crisis. A weak summer will pressure not just hotels and restaurants but also exchange houses, retail, and the informal services economy that depends on visitor spending.