Arizona 2005 Tourism Facts Statewide and Regional Tourism Indicators Year-end Summary Table of Contents 2005 Summary .................................................................. 3 Domestic Overnight Travel ............................................... 4 Domestic Overnight Leisure Profile .................................. 5 Domestic Overnight Leisure Activities.............................. 6 Janet Napolitano, Governor Economic Impact of Travel in Arizona...............................7 Statewide and County Total Direct Spending ........................................................... 8 Trends: Total Direct Spending by County ............... 9 Arizona Office of Tourism Statewide Lodging ............................................................10 AnnDee Johnson, Director of Research and Strategic Planning County Lodging Trends ...............................................11-34 State of Arizona Margie Emmermann, Director Audra Beyer, Research Manager Address: 1100 W Washington St ,Ste 155 Phoenix, AZ 85007 Tel: (602) 364-3700 Fax: (602) 364-3701 E-mail: research@azot.gov Web site: www.arizonaguide.com www.azot.gov 2 2005 Summary • 2005 Arizona Overnight Travel Volume Direct travel expenditures by all visitors to Arizona increased 9.9% to $17.5 Billion in 2005, a record year for Arizona Tourism. Resident Leisure 20.9% Non-Resident Business 15.9% Non-Resident • • • • Arizona hosted 31 million domestic and international overnight visitors, equal to roughly 85,000 visitors per day in 2005. The largest share of overnight travel came from domestic non-resident travel, up 6.0% over 2004 to 15.8 million person-stays. Domestic nonresident overnight travel to Arizona is an important segment and represents over half of Arizona’s total overnight travel volume. Total visitation volume from international markets was flat in 2005. However, Arizona did receive increased visitation from its top international markets. Visitation from the UK increased 8.6% to 126,000 person-stays. Canadian visitation increased 18.6% to 422,700 personstays. Direct travel spending in Arizona generated $456 million in local taxes and $583 million in state taxes during 2005. Travel spending in Arizona generated a total (direct and secondary) impact of 313,000 jobs with earnings of $9.3 billion in 2005. 52.5% Resident Business 7.3% Int ernat ional 3.3% Source: 2005 D.K. Shifflet and Associates, Ltd.; 2005 US Department of Commerce; 2005 Conference Board of Canada/Statistics Canada; 2001 U of Arizona Direct Travel Expenditures 1998-2005 9.9% increase 2005 20.0 (Billions) • Leisure 15.0 12.3 13.3 14.2 13.8 14.0 14.8 15.9 17.5 10.0 5.0 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 Source: Arizona Travel Impacts, Dean Runyan Associates Key International Markets 2003 2004 2005 UK 87,000 116,000 126,000 Germany 84,000 77,000 78,000 France 52,000 64,000 72,000 Japan 44,000 60,000 50,000 Mexico (Air Only) 68,000 42,000 42,000 299,100 356,300 422,800 Canada Source: 2005 US Department of Commerce, 2005 Conference Board of Canada/Statistics Canada 3 2005 Arizona Domestic Overnight Travel • Arizona Domestic Overnight Person-Stays volume increased 4.7% to a record 29.1 million domestic overnight visitors, driven by increases from 2004 to 2005 in Overnight Leisure (2.3%) and by the smaller Overnight Business Segment (12.9%). Domestic Overnight Leisure demand was at its highest level in 2005, higher than it has been in the past 6 years. Resident 35.0 23.7 30.0 25.6 25.1 17. 5 17. 1 8 .1 1997 Non-Resident 26.8 26.8 27.1 26.9 19 . 2 18 . 6 19 .0 8 .0 7. 6 8 .2 8 .1 1998 1999 2000 2001 27.8 27.8 29.1 19 .7 19 .0 2 0 .6 8 .1 8 .8 8 .5 2003 2004 2005 25.0 Millions of Person-Trips • Arizona Domestic Overnight Resident and Non-Resident Travel 20.0 15.0 2 0 .4 17.5 10.0 5.0 6 .2 6 .5 0.0 1996 2002 Source: 2005 D.K. Shifflet and Associates, Ltd. • Arizona’s domestic overnight leisure travelers stayed an average of 3.9 nights in 2005, significantly longer than the US average of 2.9 nights. Arizona Domestic Overnight Business and Leisure Travel Business Domestic overnight leisure travelers came from further distances, on average, from 2004 to 2005, with the average one way distance increase of 7% from 713 miles to 762 miles, indicating Arizona has a positive appeal to long haul travelers. Millions of Person-Trips 30.0 • Leisure 35.0 23.7 25.6 25.1 26.8 26.8 27.1 26.9 27.8 27.8 29.1 25.0 20.0 15.0 18 .3 18 .0 19 .3 2 0 .6 2 0 .0 2 0 .7 19 .9 2 1.7 2 1.6 2 2 .1 10.0 5.0 5.7 7.3 5.8 6 .2 6 .8 6 .4 7.0 6 .2 6 .2 7.0 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 0.0 Source: 2005 D.K. Shifflet and Associates, Ltd. • In 2005, Arizona’s domestic overnight leisure share of Air travel was double that of the average US overnight leisure destination (26% vs. 13%). 2005 Top 10 Originating States: Arizona Domestic Overnight Leisure (millions person-stays) Arizona 6.43 Washington 0.64 California 5.83 New Mexico 0.64 Nevada 0.86 Colorado 0.64 Texas 0.80 Minnesota 0.60 Illinois 0.66 New York 0.57 Source: 2005 D.K. Shifflet and Associates, Ltd. 4 2005 Arizona Domestic Overnight Leisure Visitors • • • • • • 5 In 2005, the Domestic Overnight Leisure travel segment provided 69% of Arizona’s total overnight persontrips. Visitors in the 35-54 age group comprised the highest share of Arizona Overnight Leisure visitors (39%), followed closely by older visitors 55+ (37%) and younger visitors ages 1834 (24%). Arizona’s Domestic Overnight Leisure market is comprised mostly of couples (41%), adults traveling alone (28%) and families (20%). By party type, couples provided the highest share of travel parties and trip-dollars in 2005, while families provided the second highest share of trip-dollars, but the third highest share of travel parties. Domestic non-resident overnight leisure travel to Arizona is composed primarily of boomers and the silent generation, while resident overnight leisure travel shows a higher incidence of Generation X travelers. Arizona domestic overnight leisure travel saw an increase in boomer and silent generation visitors in 2005. These two generational groups contribute a relatively higher share of dollars per trip, making them high value visitors on an individual trip basis. 2005 Average Household Income Arizona Domestic Overnight Leisure Travelers 2003 2004 2005 Resident $57,400 $64,200 $58,900 Non-Resident $75,400 $76,800 $75,100 Source: 2005 D.K. Shifflet and Associates, Ltd. 2005 Average Age Arizona Domestic Overnight Leisure Travelers 2003 2004 2005 Resident 41 yrs. 41 yrs. 44 yrs. Non-Resident 47 yrs. 48 yrs. 51 yrs. Source: 2005 D.K. Shifflet and Associates, Ltd. 2005 Arizona Domestic Overnight Leisure Traveler Generation Analysis US Resident NonResident Millennials (after 1981) 4% 4% 1% GenX (1965-1980) 42% 47% 29% Boomers (1946-1964) 36% 30% 39% Silent (1930-1945) 16% 16% 26% 2% 4% 5% GI (1929 and earlier) Source: 2005 D.K. Shifflet and Associates, Ltd. Primary Activities Arizona Domestic Overnight Leisure Travelers Non-Resident Sightseeing 37% Dining 34% Shopping 29% Entertainment 27% Parks (national/state) 19% Visit Historic Site 14% Museum, Art Exhibit 9% Hike, Bike 8% Attend Sports 8% Golf 7% 2005 Arizona Domestic Overnight Leisure Travel Primary Activities Source: 2005 D.K. Shifflet and Associates, Ltd. Primary Activities Arizona Domestic Overnight Leisure Travelers Resident Dining 32% Sightseeing 25% Shopping 20% Entertainment 17% Parks (national/state) 13% Hike, Bike 9% Camping 9% Attend Sports 8% Night Life 8% Nature/Culture 6% Source: 2005 D.K. Shifflet and Associates, Ltd. 6 • Arizona has domestic participation rates well above the US average on Sightseeing, National/State Park, Historic Sites, and Golf visits. • The primary activities for overnight non-resident and resident leisure travelers were similar except nonresident travelers indicated a higher percentage of golf, museum and historic site visitation than resident travelers. Domestic Overnight Leisure Travel by Region • • The data on the following pages provides an analysis of Arizona Domestic Overnight Leisure by Arizona Region. The map to the right depicts Arizona’s five regions, the red area represents Northern Arizona, the green area Central Arizona, the purple area Phoenix & Central, the blue area Tucson & Southern and the orange area the West Coast. In instances where visitors did not indicate the area visited in Arizona, those visitors are categorized under Other Arizona. Domestic Overnight Leisure visitation to Arizona’s regions varies in terms of visitor demographics, leisure activities, trip timing and origin region. The following tables provide a comparison between Arizona’s regions. Arizona Northern . Domestic Overnight Leisure Visitation North Central Phoenix Tucson & & Other AZ Southern Central 22.1 M 19.6% 7.1% 5.8% 44.5% 17.0% 6.0% 49 47 49 46 50 47 47 18-34 years 24% 29% 15% 35% 20% 34% 22% 35-54 years 38% 41% 51% 32% 41% 30% 51% 55+ years 37% 30% 33% 33% 39% 36% 27% $73,100 $76,490 $68,710 $74,700 $60,930 $63,170 Average Age Average HH Income $70,380 Average Party Size 2.3 2.7 2.4 2.6 2.0 2.4 2.4 Average Length of Stay 3.9 2.6 3.3 2.5 4.6 4.0 4.1 Source: DK Shifflet and Assoc. 7 West Coast Domestic Overnight Leisure Travel by Region West Coast Arizona Northern Phoenix North Tucson & & Central Central Southern Other AZ Trip Timing 1st Quarter (Jan, Feb, Mar) 2nd Quarter (Apr, May, Jun) 27% 24% 17% 31% 38% 22% 13% 31% 27% 25% 34% 18% 23% 18% 3rd Quarter (July, Aug, Sept) 24% 32% 23% 27% 21% 21% 31% 4th Quarter (Oct, Nov, Dec) 25% 20% 18% 28% 27% 27% 29% Source: DK Shifflet and Assoc. • • Trip timing to Arizona is fairly even between all four quarters. When looking at trip timing by regions within Arizona, however, seasonality does emerge. For instance, the West Coast receives 38% and Tucson & Southern Region’s 34% of their annual visitation during the first quarter. Northern Arizona receives 31% of its visitation during the second quarter and 32% of its visitation during the third quarter. In terms of leisure purpose of stay, most overnight visitors come to Arizona to visit friends and relatives (42%). However, when looking at visitation • Arizona Northern to Arizona’s regions, the primary purpose of stay differs depending on the region. In Northern Arizona, a high percentage of visitors travel there for a general vacation (43%), whereas the West Coast attracts visitors for getaway weekends (39%). Leisure visitors to Arizona predominately travel as couples (41%), as one adult (28%) or as a family (20%). By region, visitors to North Central Arizona are equally likely to travel as couples (37%) or as a family (35%). The Phoenix & Central region has a high incidence of both couple party type (36%) and one adult travel type (37%). West Coast Phoenix North Tucson & & Central Central Southern Other AZ Leisure Purpose of Stay Getaway Weekend 13% 23% 39% 23% 8% 13% 28% General Vacation 22% 43% 15% 12% 15% 16% 20% Visit Friend/Relative 42% 12% 28% 46% 51% 53% 31% Special Event 11% 13% 8% 12% 13% 10% 5% Other Personal 12% 9% 10% 8% 12% 8% 16% One Adult 28% 11% 29% 16% 37% 26% 23% Couples 41% 48% 37% 37% 36% 39% 36% Two Males or Two Females 5% 7% 4% 6% 6% 3% 7% Three or more Adults 6% 12% 7% 5% 5% 6% 6% Families 20% 22% 24% 35% 16% 26% 28% Traveling Party Source: DK Shifflet and Assoc. 8 2005 Domestic Overnight Leisure Travel by Region North Central Phoenix Tucson & & Central Southern Other AZ Arizona Northern West Coast Arizona 29.1% 36.3% 18.2% 58.2% 15.3% 39.2% 41.5% California 26.4% 24.8% 60.7% 18.3% 26.9% 24.0% 28.8% Nevada 3.9% 3.1% 6.7% 9.9% 2.8% 0.2% 1.6% Texas 3.6% 2.5% 0.9% 0.6% 4.4% 3.1% 5.7% Illinois 3.0% 2.5% 0% 1.0% 5.1% 2.3% 2.1% New Mexico 2.9% 2.4% 0.7% 0.7% 4.0% 2.7% 3.7% Washington 2.9% 1.3% 1.2% 0.9% 4.4% 1.9% 1.1% Colorado 2.9% 2.2% 0.9% 1.1% 2.5% 4.4% 0.8% Minnesota 2.7% 1.2% 0.9% 0.2% 5.1% 1.3% 1.5% New York 2.6% 1.0% 0% 0.1% 4.9% 1.4% 1.4% Florida 2.1% 2.5% 0.8% 0% 1.9% 1.6% 0.2% Origin State Source: DK Shifflet and Assoc. • The table above represents top origin states by Arizona region. Californians represent approximately 61% of the overnight leisure visitation to the West Coast Area. Tucson and Southern Arizona’s visitation is comprised of visitors from Arizona, California and Colorado. Northern Arizona’s top feeder markets for leisure travel are Arizona, California and Nevada. • The table below depicts overnight leisure travelers top activities by region. Dining, Sightseeing, Shopping and Entertainment were the top four categories for every region. Those categories were removed from this analysis to provide a more detailed comparison among other leisure activities. Northern Arizona’s visitors enjoy visiting State/National Parks, hiking and biking and visiting historic sites. West Coast visitors enjoy camping, while Phoenix & Central visitors enjoy the area’s night life and attending sporting events. 2005 Top Leisure Activities Overnight Visitors Arizona Northern Parks (National/State) 18% 45% Visit Historic Site 12% 17% 7% 11% 8% 19% 8% Attend Sports/Olympic Event 8% 1% 4% 1% 13% 12% 2% Hike, Bike 8% 16% 6% 13% 3% 6% 11% Museum/Art Exhibit 7% 5% 2% 2% 8% 11% 2% Night Life 7% 3% 8% 5% 10% 7% 3% Camping 6% 6% 18% 9% 2% 6% 21% Golf 6% 3% 5% 1% 9% 4% 1% Gamble 5% 3% 10% 8% 5% 5% 8% Source: DK Shifflet and Assoc. 9 Phoenix West North Tucson & Other & Coast Central Central Southern AZ 8% 11% 10% 19% 13% Visitor Spending by Type of Traveler Accommodation 2005p The Economic Impact of Travel in Arizona ($Billions) • • • Travel is an important contributor to the health of both the state and local economies. In 2005, total direct travel spending in Arizona was $17.5 billion. Travel industry employment increased by 3.3 percent, marking the third consecutive year of employment growth. Arizona visitors that stayed overnight in lodging establishments accounted for 42.3 percent of all visitor spending in 2005. Taxes generated by the travel industry are primarily paid by visitors rather than residents. In 2005, 78% of the visitor spending in Arizona was made by international visitors and residents of other states, making the local and state tax revenue generated by travel spending a net benefit to Arizona residents. Direct Travel Expenditures 2005 EXPENDITURES Day Travel $3.5 Hotel, Motel $6.9 (3.1%) Vacation Home $0.5 21.5% 42.3% 28.8% (4.3%) Private Home $4.7 Campground $0.7 Source: Arizona Travel Impacts, Dean Runyan Associates Travel Employment 2005 EMPLOYMENT 168,000 145,000 Direct Secondary 313,000 TOTAL DIRECT EMPLOYMENT BY SECTOR 86,000 45,000 20,000 17,000 1. Accommodation & Food Services 2. Arts, Entertainment & Recreation 3. Retail Trade 4. Transportation DIRECT PAYROLL $4.5B TOTAL PAYROLL $9.3 B Source: Arizona Travel Impacts, Dean Runyan Associates Total Travel Employment 1998-2005 $17.5 B 320 FEDERAL STATE LOCAL Source: Arizona Travel Impacts, Dean Runyan Associates 2,104 B $1,064 B $583 M $456 M 310 (Thousands) TAX REVENUE 313 300 303 295 300 290 307 289 298 293 280 270 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 Source: Arizona Travel Impacts, Dean Runyan Associates 10 Total Direct Travel Spending in Arizona Spending Earnings Employment Tax Revenue ($ Billions) ($ Billion) ($ Billion) (Thousand) Local State Federal Total 1998 12.3 3.3 155 348 391 647 1,386 1999 13.3 3.6 161 368 429 712 1,509 2000 14.2 3.8 163 391 454 743 1,588 2001 13.8 3.8 159 372 457 795 1,623 2002 14.0 3.8 157 379 484 853 1,716 2003 14.8 4.0 159 391 503 914 1,808 2004 15.9 4.3 163 413 535 987 1,936 2005p 17.5 4.5 168 456 583 1,064 2,104 Source: Arizona Travel Impacts, Dean Runyan Associates Total Direct Travel Spending in Arizona 2005p Travel Spending Related Travel-Generated Impacts Total Earnings Employment Local Taxes State Taxes Total Taxes ($ Million) ($Million) (jobs) ($Million) ($Million) ($Million) Apache 128.5 26.6 1,730 2.9 5.1 8.0 Cochise 322.4 70.9 4,190 10.6 11.3 21.9 Coconino 836.5 222.4 10,740 24.1 31.0 55.0 Gila 232.6 55.6 2,860 2.9 6.4 9.4 Graham/ Greenlee 36.4 8.7 860.0 0.9 1.5 2.4 La Paz 205.9 30.8 1,430 2.1 8.5 10.6 Maricopa 10,960.6 2,980.6 91,160 311.5 345.9 657.4 Mohave 434.3 98.6 5,110 9.2 17.4 26.5 Navajo 259.1 57.7 3,040 5.5 9.8 15.3 Pima 2,198.3 543.8 25,550 47.2 82.3 129.5 Pinal 359.6 83.9 4,400 6.6 13.6 20.2 Santa Cruz 282.3 50.3 2,280 5.5 8.7 14.2 Yavapai 638.1 165.8 8,780 14.0 20.7 34.8 Yuma 566.3 127.3 5,990 13.4 20.5 33.9 17,460.9 4,523.0 168,130 456.4 582.8 1,039.2 Arizona Source: Arizona Travel Impacts, Dean Runyan Associates 11 State Transaction Privilege Taxes Generated By Direct Travel Spending, 2005p Maricopa & Pima The impact of traveler spending is relatively more important to Arizona’s rural counties than urban counties. All Other 0% 5% 10% 15% Percent Travel-Generated Source: Dean Runyan Associates and Arizona Department of Revenue Annual % Change Arizona County Total Direct Spending, 1998-2005p 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005p Apache 83.1 95.9 109.2 104.7 105.2 107.8 113.2 128.5 13.5 6.4 Cochise 215.2 238.3 257.7 261.6 283.7 280.2 301.8 322.4 6.8 5.9 Coconino 678.8 714.1 733.9 697.5 699.6 735.9 780.5 836.5 7.2 3.0 Gila 181.2 190.3 205.9 205.9 207.8 213.6 220.5 232.6 5.5 3.6 Graham/ Greenlee 24.9 27.1 31.2 29.6 29.7 30.7 31.8 36.4 14.6 5.6 La Paz 127.7 147.1 160.0 162.7 161.8 173.5 184.2 205.9 11.8 7.1 8,166.8 8,770.5 8,486.0 8,464.8 9,125.4 10.9 5.3 Maricopa 7,630.4 Mohave 261.7 298.2 320.9 328.6 336.5 362.7 396.7 434.3 9.5 7.5 Navajo 183.5 215.5 238.4 224.5 228.0 229.2 236.5 259.1 9.5 5.0 1,764.7 1,874.0 1,805.3 1,892.4 1,897.8 2,019.4 2,198.3 8.9 4.5 Pima 1,620.5 Pinal 219.4 244.1 262.7 271.5 278.6 293.8 323.3 359.6 11.2 7.3 Santa Cruz 207.6 227.2 236.8 237.9 299.7 262.2 272.2 282.3 3.7 4.5 Yavapai 437.8 583.9 555.6 554.5 558.9 581.3 588.2 638.1 8.5 5.5 Yuma 379.0 410.3 439.9 442.5 498.7 498.1 527.5 566.3 7.3 5.9 9.9 5.2 Arizona 12,250.8 13,323.5 14,196.7 13,812.7 14,045.4 14,792.3 15,882.3 17,460.9 Source: Arizona Travel Impacts, Dean Runyan Associates 12 9,886.4 10,960.6 04-05p 98-05p 2005 Arizona Lodging • 2005 was a good year for the lodging industry in Arizona. The state outpaced the US and the Mountain Region in 2005 in terms of percent increases in occupancy, ADR, RevPAR and demand; reaching the highest levels in the past five years. • Demand for lodging in Arizona increased 5.5% over 2004 compared to the US increase of 3.3% and the Mountain region increase of 3.8%. Room supply remained relatively steady across the state during 2005. • • • Lodging demand in 2005 drove increases in occupancy rates in Arizona lodging. Statewide occupancy increased an average of 4.9% for the year to a rate of 65.9%. The ADR (Average Daily Rate) for Arizona in 2005 was $90.68, an increase of 7.3% over 2004. The US’s ADR increased 5.3% to $90.84 and the Mountain Region increased 2.6% to a rate of $90.05. Arizona’s average RevPAR rate in 2005 was $59.76 , up 12.6% from the previous year. The increase in average RevPAR was driven mostly by the increases experienced in ADR. Mountain Region States: US Census Bureau Arizona Occupancy Rates 2000-2005 66.0% 64.0% 62.0% 60.0% 58.0% 56.0% 54.0% 2000 US 2001 2002 2003 2004 Mountain Region 2005 Arizona Source: Smith Travel Research Arizona RevPAR Rates 2000-2005 $60.00 $50.00 $40.00 $30.00 $20.00 $10.00 • In 2005, the average RevPAR rate for the state exceeded the average RevPAR rates both nationally and regionally. Source: Smith Travel Research 13 $0.00 2000 US 2001 2002 2003 Mountain Region Source: Smith Travel Research 2004 2005 Arizona Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport Enplanements/Deplanements 2005 Airport Passenger Traffic 2005 was a year record breaking year for both Tucson International and Sky Harbor International Airports. For the first time, Sky Harbor International Airport exceed 40 million passengers in 2005. Tucson International Airport broke the 4 million passenger mark for the first time. 42.0 41.0 40.0 39.0 38.0 37.0 36.0 35.0 34.0 33.0 32.0 • • 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 • Source: Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport • Tucson International Airport Enplanements/Deplanements 4,200,000 4,000,000 3,800,000 3,600,000 3,400,000 3,200,000 3,000,000 2001 2002 Source: Tucson International Airport 14 2003 2004 2005 Sky Harbor International Airport recorded 41,204,011 passengers in 2005, up 4.3% from 2004. Tucson International Airport counted 4,130,321 passengers in 2005, up 9.5% from 2004. Grand Canyon National Park’s airport passenger traffic was up 4.5% from the previous year, or 804,516 enplanements/ deplanements. Yuma International Airport recorded 121,809 passengers, up 2.1% from the previous year. Arizona National Park Visitation 2001-2005 • 12,400,000 12,200,000 12,000,000 11,800,000 Arizona’s National Parks welcomed 11,594,161 visitors in 2005, a slight decrease from 2004 (-1.3%). Top Visited National Parks 2005 1. Grand Canyon NP 2. Glen Canyon NRA 3. Lake Mead NRA 4. Canyon de Chelly NM 5. Saguaro NP 11,600,000 11,400,000 11,200,000 11,000,000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 Source: National Park Service Arizona State Park Visitation 2001-2005 • 2,600,000 2,500,000 2,400,000 2,300,000 2,200,000 2,100,000 2,000,000 2001 Source: Arizona State Parks 15 2002 2003 2004 2005 Visitation at Arizona’s State Parks remained relatively the same in 2005 with 2,267,246 visitors (+0.1%) Top Visited Arizona State Parks 2005: 1. Lake Havasu State Park 2. Slide Rock State Park 3. Patagonia Lake State Park 4. Kartchner Caverns State Park 5. Catalina State Park Top 50 Arizona Attractions 2005 Visitation Arizona’s Top 25 Private Attractions 2005 Visitation Arizona’s Top 25 Natural Attractions 4,696,285 Chase Field 4,470,232 Grand Canyon National Park 2,500,000 London Bridge 3,629,550 Saguaro National Park 2,300,000 Tempe Town Lake 2,500,000 South Mountain Park 1,695,135 U.S. Airways Center 1,250,000 The Phoenix Zoo 736,215 Arizona State University Sun Devil Stadium 1,426,915 Lake Mead National Recreation Area* 900,000 Canyon de Chelly 699,345 Glendale Arena 622,912 Montezuma Castle National Monument 675,225 WestWorld of Scottsdale 598,498 Petrified Forest National Park Coronado National Forest and Sabino Canyon Recreation Area 600,000 Rawhide Western Town & Steakhouse 594,278 550,000 Tombstone 500,754 Lake Pleasant Regional Park 453,000 Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum 316,684 Lake Havasu State Park 450,000 Phoenix International Raceway 308,832 Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument 445,117 Reid Park Zoo 303,277 Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park 400,000 Arizona Science Center 243,489 Slide Rock State Park 395,000 Wildlife World Zoo 229,913 Sunset Crater Volcano National Monument 317,929 Desert Botanical Garden 226,010 Wupatki National Monument 315,000 Scottsdale Center for the Arts 221,378 Meteor Crater 250,000 Arizona Temple and Visitors' Center 184,715 Patagonia Lake State Park 222,277 Grand Canyon Railway 179,129 Kartchner Caverns State Park 200,000 Heard Museum 175,238 Tohono Chul Park 175,443 Mesa Art Center 155,000 Colossal Cave Mountain Park 170,853 Phoenix Art Museum 130,088 Catalina State Park 169,729 Arizona Snowbowl & Summer Scenic Skyride 128,275 Walnut Canyon National Monument 160,000 Tucson Museum of Art & Historic Block 108,830 Tuzigoot National Monument 138,226 Pima Air & Space Museum 107,649 Picacho Peak State Park Source: Reporting Entities 16 1,928,274 Glen Canyon National Recreation Area