More People,
More Money
or twenty-one years, Alaskan Tour Guides has been helping tourists make once-in-a-lifetime memories. The company, owned by Bob and Doreen Toller, specializes in small-group land tours that take people to places large companies normally can’t go. “We go places they can’t access with their big motor coaches… There’s no crowd, and you get to see the real Alaska,” Bob Toller says.
With its modern, thirteen-passenger vans, Alaskan Tour Guides takes groups on up-close adventures led by year-round residents with engaging stories to tell about living in Alaska. The Wasilla-based business runs tours from Fairbanks to Homer, with Kenai Fjords and Denali National Parks being popular destinations. Its customers can see amazing vistas, watch incredible wildlife, and indulge in unique activities like gold panning, dog sledding, and exploring glaciers. “Our trips are a little bit more expensive than the cruise ship tours, but you get ten times more,” Toller says.
More People,
More Money
or twenty-one years, Alaskan Tour Guides has been helping tourists make once-in-a-lifetime memories. The company, owned by Bob and Doreen Toller, specializes in small-group land tours that take people to places large companies normally can’t go. “We go places they can’t access with their big motor coaches… There’s no crowd, and you get to see the real Alaska,” Bob Toller says.
With its modern, thirteen-passenger vans, Alaskan Tour Guides takes groups on up-close adventures led by year-round residents with engaging stories to tell about living in Alaska. The Wasilla-based business runs tours from Fairbanks to Homer, with Kenai Fjords and Denali National Parks being popular destinations. Its customers can see amazing vistas, watch incredible wildlife, and indulge in unique activities like gold panning, dog sledding, and exploring glaciers. “Our trips are a little bit more expensive than the cruise ship tours, but you get ten times more,” Toller says.
or twenty-one years, Alaskan Tour Guides has been helping tourists make once-in-a-lifetime memories. The company, owned by Bob and Doreen Toller, specializes in small-group land tours that take people to places large companies normally can’t go. “We go places they can’t access with their big motor coaches… There’s no crowd, and you get to see the real Alaska,” Bob Toller says.
With its modern, thirteen-passenger vans, Alaskan Tour Guides takes groups on up-close adventures led by year-round residents with engaging stories to tell about living in Alaska. The Wasilla-based business runs tours from Fairbanks to Homer, with Kenai Fjords and Denali National Parks being popular destinations. Its customers can see amazing vistas, watch incredible wildlife, and indulge in unique activities like gold panning, dog sledding, and exploring glaciers. “Our trips are a little bit more expensive than the cruise ship tours, but you get ten times more,” Toller says.
Currently, Alaskan Tour Guides has six vans that transport about eighty people each day. The company does approximately 100 land tours annually, in addition to its family tours, cruise transfer tours, and other transportation options.
This projection doesn’t surprise Sarah Leonard, president and CEO of the Alaska Travel Industry Association. “The cruise industry is our fastest-growing sector,” she says. “Passenger volume was up 6.5 percent last year.”
Leonard points out that the 6 percent increase expected for cruise ship passengers this year is not just for southeast Alaska, where most of the itineraries for cruise ships go. It will also impact cross-gulf travel. “That traffic was up 15.3 percent in 2019,” she says.
The growth of the tourism industry has a broad impact on the state’s economy. It lifts Alaska’s air market, supporting increases in Anchorage and Fairbanks, in particular. However, independent travel is mostly flat. “Alaska Marine Highway ferry traffic is down, which is due in part to the budget situation,” Leonard says.
She adds: “As we experience more visitors spending more time in Alaska, that definitely lends toward the economic impact for communities and the state through various visitor fees and direct and indirect spending. Alaska visitors contribute over $4.5 billion in overall economic impact in the state… When we look at jobs created, we see the tourism industry is the second-largest private-sector employer.”
While the surge in overall visitor volume is significant, the effect of Alaska’s independent travelers is also notable. “If we shift to economic contributions rather than volume, we see larger-than-average spending and engagement in independent travelers who fly in and explore using a rental vehicle and a mix of other transportation (rail, guided excursions, etc.),” Saupe says. “These travelers tend to stay longer, spend more, and incorporate more—and more varied—activities.”
Summer 2018 visitor volume represented an increase of 5 percent (100,000 visitors) from summer 2017. The report explained: “Most of the increase is attributable to the cruise market, which grew by 7 percent (79,300 visitors). The air market increased by 1 percent (9,600 visitors), while the highway/ferry market increased by 13 percent (11,100 visitors).”
The summer 2018 visitor volume of 2 million-plus was the fourth consecutive summer of growth, according to Alaska Visitor Volume Report, Summer 2018. Volume increased by 7 percent, 4 percent, 4 percent, then 5 percent, from 2014 to 2018. From a long-term perspective, the 2018 volume represents 27 percent more visitors than a decade earlier.
Additionally, the number of Alaska Marine Highway System passengers was up by 1.4 percent in summer 2018, residents and visitors combined. Sportfishing licenses sold to non-residents were up by 13.5 percent between 2017 and 2018, January through September. Bed taxes and vehicle rental taxes—which reflect usage by both residents and non-residents and can be affected by changes in rental rates—told a mixed story. Bed tax indicators varied by community for April through June (the last quarter available before the report was released), with bed tax revenues up for Fairbanks, Denali, Juneau, and Sitka and down for Anchorage and Ketchikan.
In addition, Saupe says, Alaska’s tourism industry is deeply local, which plays well for places like Anchorage. “Anchorage tourism is still principally made up of small, locally-owned companies, stores, and restaurants,” she explains. “This helps make Anchorage a perfect match for one of the broader trends in tourism: the interest in authentic experiences, the desire to find the ‘real’ place.”
Within the cruise industry, there are multiple influences fueling the growth. Key factors include higher-capacity ships, recent port investments, and the addition of more land packages, Leonard says. “They’re bringing larger ships, so there is more space for visitors,” she explains. “They are also investing in our communities with port investments in Ketchikan and Juneau and land investments with some companies enhancing or expanding their rooms.”
Holland America Line, for example, is expanding the guest experience on its Alaska Land+Sea Journeys with the addition of new guest accommodations at its Denali operation that includes the McKinley Chalet Resort hotel and Denali Square.
The addition of cruise itineraries is also having an impact on the tourism industry in Alaska, which is the premier cruise destination market in the United States. As more ships enter the Alaska market, new itineraries are being added, including the Northwest Passage, the Aleutians, Valdez, and smaller communities in Southeast Alaska, according to the Cruise Lines International Association (CLIA).
Ten additional ships are scheduled to visit Alaska in 2020, with twenty-nine added port calls, according to the Alaska Department of Labor and Workforce Development.
Alaska Travel Industry Association
There has also been an increase in aurora tourism, which is often thought of as a primarily Interior pursuit. However, Saupe is seeing a significant amount of interest from Anchorage travelers who want to catch a glimpse of the spectacular aurora borealis. “Luckily, we’re in a prime spot to take advantage of the northern lights, and we’ve seen a number of companies expand their aurora viewing options,” she says. “Vantage points like the Knik River area, Glen Alps, and Turnagain Arm have good northern lights viewing prospects amid a very dynamic mountain landscape. When we talk to people planning a visit between August and April, the northern lights tend to be a big interest and a key motivator.”
Alaska is also a safe and exotic bucket-list destination for many travelers, Leonard says. And a significant number of people who cruise to the state on a first-time visit opt to return. In fact, according to the Resource Development Council, one in three Alaska visitors are repeat travelers to the state, and many of those who return are independent travelers who first came to Alaska on a cruise ship.
To Alaskans, Anchorage may feel like a well-established place for travel, Saupe says. But there are people who don’t have the city on their radar yet and are surprised and excited by what Anchorage has to offer. There’s a wide appeal for what Anchorage has in all seasons, and there’s still opportunity to foster better returns and expand. “Moderate, managed growth means big benefits for locals and our economy, while maintaining a high level of service/product for our customer, the traveling public,” she says.
As such, Visit Anchorage continues to focus on not just volume, but also the length and quality of time visitors spend in Anchorage. For example, the organization works to ensure that cruise passengers who might otherwise only see Anchorage at the start or end of a visit are aware of what the area has and what extending the visit—for a day or a week—opens up for their travels.
Saupe emphasizes that there’s also opportunity for growth with food and beer tourism. Big Swig Tours is a good example of a company that’s leading the way in this area. “Anchorage has thirteen breweries, plus distilleries and a meadery,” she says. “Anchorage’s food scene tends to surprise travelers who aren’t initially sure of what to expect in terms of variety and number of choices. Certainly, there are lots of opportunities to sample Alaska in the glass and on the plate here in Anchorage.”
She adds: “We see a lot of potential in expanding offerings with a local angle, food being just one possible aspect. In any season, we can use more experiences that incorporate local people and stories, particuarly Alaska Native perspectives.”
However, Saupe says, travel promotion is vital for the continued growth of tourism in Anchorage and Alaska. And growth doesn’t happen automatically. “It takes a combination of promoting the place, a good national financial picture, and exciting product development aligned with traveler interest,” she says. “When those three things align, we make gains. Tourism is a crowded, competitive, and global business, and Anchorage has to stay top-of-mind and relevant to travelers, or else they’ll choose someplace else.”