World's best 100 cities including Paris, Dubai, Rome and two UK hotspots
Two UK cities have placed among the best 100 in the world in new rankings.
French capital Paris has topped a list of the 100 best cities in the world based on economics, business performance, tourism performance, tourism infrastructure, tourism policy and attractiveness, health and safety, and sustainability.
The City of Love's reputation will be put to the test this summer when it hosts the Olympic Games, the first European city to do so in 12 years. An estimated 15.3 million visitors are expected to visit Paris and its surrounding areas during the Olympics, with an estimated 3.3 million of these as attendees.
Airbnbs and hotels across the city will be packed for the main games and Paralympics, while those looking to visit Paris for non-sporting reasons will have to contend with great throngs of visitors. The cost of the metro will double in that time and parts of the city will be closed off, making trips there a little more expensive and trickier than usual.
The number crunchers at Euromonitor International, who put together the list, believe that Paris has what it takes to handle the influx of visitors and remain one of the most attractive and sustainable tourism cities in the world.
Eight remote and beautiful but brutal jobs if you want to leave it all behindThe French capital beat London in this year's rankings, with the English metropolis coming in at 10th place. Edinburgh was the only other UK settlement to make the grade in 2023, coming in at a respectable 62.
According to the report, London stands out from the crowd with the best tourism infrastructure worldwide in 2023. It was also the city which saw the second most international arrivals in the world in 2023, with 18.8million representing an increase of 17% on the year before. Only Istanbul had more.
The strong recovery of international travel globally continues despite difficult financial times for many, with 38% growth in trips, projected to reach 1.3 billion in 2023.
A big feature of the year in terms of tourism has been the return of Chinese international travellers, following the removal of the government’s quarantine requirements. Global inbound tourism spending is set to record an outstanding $1.7 trillion US in 2023.
The use of technology continues to bring efficiency to the travel industry and will help to face challenges imposed by labour shortages while improving customer service experiences. The introduction of new technologies such as biometric identification, generative AI, payment systems or virtual or augmented reality tools will be widely used by most travel providers and cities.
World's best 100 cities
- Paris
- Dubai
- Madrid
- Tokyo
- Amsterdam
- Berlin
- Rome
- New York
- Barcelona
- London
- Singapore
- Munich
- Milan
- Seoul
- Dublin
- Osaka
- Hong Kong
- Vienna
- Los Angeles
- Lisbon
- Prague
- Sydney
- Istanbul
- Melbourne
- Orlando, FL
- Frankfurt am Main
- Kyoto
- Taipei
- Florence
- Toronto
- Athens
- Zurich
- Bangkok
- Las Vegas, NV
- Miami
- Kuala Lumpur
- Venice
- Abu Dhabi
- Stockholm
- Brussels
- Tel Aviv
- San Francisco
- Shanghai
- Warsaw
- Guangzhou
- Copenhagen
- Nice
- Washington
- Budapest
- Shenzhen
- Vancouver
- Palma de Mallorca
- Seville
- São Paulo
- Valencia
- Mexico City
- Antalya
- Sapporo
- Beijing
- Busan
- Fukuoka
- Edinburgh
- Porto
- Jerusalem
- Kraków
- Rio de Janeiro
- Honolulu, HI
- Montreal
- Macau
- Cancún
- Marne-La-Vallée
- Doha
- Sharjah
- Rhodes
- Verona
- Bologna
- Thessaloniki
- Buenos Aires
- Lima
- Phuket
- Delhi
- Heraklion
- Tallinn
- Pattaya-Chonburi
- Ho Chi Minh City
- Playa Del Carmen
- Johor Bahru
- Santiago
- Tbilisi
- Riyadh
- Marrakech
- Vilnius
- Mugla
- Zhuhai
- Mecca
- Punta Cana
- Guilin
- Hanoi
- Cairo
- Muscat
You can find out more on euromonitor.com.