
Revenue fell to $7.71 million from $8.11 million in the same period of 2024, marking the first significant decline since COVID-19 disruptions in 2020. April 2025 revenue dropped 13.5% to $2.163 million, partly reflecting the boost from last year’s solar eclipse, according to the report.
Hospitality tax collections in 17 cities rose 9.8% to $24.976 million, driven by a 13.6% increase in restaurant sales, while hotel taxes slipped 2.45% to $5.26 million.
Tourism employment grew a small amount, averaging 129,975 jobs from January–April 2025, up 0.83% from 128,900 in 2024 and fully recovered from pandemic lows of 74,200 in April 2020.
Regional Highlights (January–April 2025 vs. 2024):
- Northwest Arkansas: 30,625 jobs (+0.1%)
- Fort Smith: 8,975 jobs (-0.3%)
- Central Arkansas: 34,125 jobs (-2.8%)
- Memphis-West Memphis: 60,875 jobs (-1.5%)
- Texarkana: 6,700 jobs (+4.3%)
Select city hospitality tax collections:
- Bentonville: $1.454M (+14.9%)
- Fayetteville: $3.118M (-4.8%)
- Little Rock: $6.133M (+2.4%)
- Hot Springs: $3.197M (+1.8%)
- Rogers: $436,535 (+8.6%)
- Texarkana: $452,792 (-0.9%)
The Arkansas Tourism Ticker, managed by Talk Business & Politics and sponsored by the Arkansas Hospitality Association and the Arkansas Department of Parks, Heritage and Tourism, track: hospitality tax collections, tourism employment and the statewide 2% tourism tax.
Click here for the full report.
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