Halal tourism

Halal Chinese restaurant in Taipei, Taiwan.

Halal tourism (sometimes called Halal travel or halal-friendly tourism) is a subcategory of tourism which is geared towards Muslim families who abide by rules of Islam. The hotels in such destinations do not serve alcohol, have separate swimming pools and spa facilities for men and women, serve only halal foods, and have prayer facilities in-room and in a common hall. Travel agents, while designing travel packages for this, follow guidelines of halal. Malaysia, Turkey and many more countries offer facilities in accordance with the religious beliefs of Muslim tourists in order to attract more customers. Currently, there exist no internationally recognized standards on Halal tourism.

The Halal tourism industry also provides flights where no alcohol or pork products are served, prayer timings are announced, and religious programs are broadcast as part of entertainment offered on board.

Many international hotels do serve halal food that is slaughtered in accordance with the teachings of Islamic Sharia and is free of any substances forbidden by Islam such as pork and alcohol. Some hotels have employed people from the Muslim world to provide translation services and other assistance that may be needed by tourists from Muslim countries.[1]

The Economist's article on Halal Business published on May 25, 2013: "It is not just manufactured halal products. Services such as halal holidays are booming, too. Crescent Tours, a London-based online travel specialist, books clients into hotels in Turkey that have separate swimming pools for men and women, no-alcohol policies and halal restaurants, and rents out private holiday villas with high walls",[2] which was featured on Forbes offers Muslim-friendly hotels and advice about halal food options, Quran availability and more.[3]

Based on a report by Thomson Reuters, in 2014 Muslims from around the globe spent $142 billion on travel (excluding Hajj and Umrah). In comparison, travellers from China spent $160 billion on travel in 2014, while US travellers spent $143 billion, placing the Muslim travel sector in third place in global travel spending and accounting for 11 per cent of total global expenditures on travel.[4]

Muslim travel contributed over US$156 billion to global GDP in 2016 and is primed to grow to US$225 billion by 2028, according to the Global Muslim Travel Index 2023[5] by CrescentRating.[6][7]

  1. ^ Halal tourism on the rise worldwide: Al Watan Daily
  2. ^ "Consuming passions". The Economist. May 25, 2013.
  3. ^ Caroline Howard (2016-02-24). "30 Millennials Under 30 In Asia Who Are Changing E-commerce And Shopping". Forbes.
  4. ^ Christine Hinz (2015-12-05). "The buzz around halal". Travel Tourism News Middle East.
  5. ^ CrescentRating. "Muslim/Halal Travel & Tourism Market Research, Reports & Publications". CrescentRating.
  6. ^ CrescentRating. "Global Muslim Travel Index 2018". www.crescentrating.com.
  7. ^ Global Muslim Travel Index. "Global Muslim Travel Index".