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Home»Tourism»What is ‘authenticity’ in travel & tourism?
Tourism

What is ‘authenticity’ in travel & tourism?

editorialBy editorialSeptember 29, 2025No Comments8 Mins Read
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What is ‘authenticity’ in travel & tourism?
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‘Authen­ti­city’ is the ideal for many trav­el­lers, influ­en­cers, and com­ment­at­ors. But what is it? Can des­tin­a­tion mar­keters and tour­ism pro­fes­sion­als pack­age it and sell it … authentically?

Thanks to Prof Valer­ia Minghetti and Dr Sham­iso Nyajeka for tak­ing the time to share their thoughts on the ques­tion. Their responses appear in the order received.

And thanks to Dr Seye­deh Fate­meh Mosta­favi Shirazi for an insight into the chal­lenges of domest­ic over­tour­ism in north­ern Iran. It’s a “Good Tour­ism” Insight BiteX.

Have a thought to share? Respond in the com­ments at any time. Or write a Bite of yourown.


Authenticity comes from community acceptance and engagement

Valeria Minghetti, Chief Research Director at CISET, the International Centre for Studies on Tourism Economics, Università Ca’ Foscari, Italy

For me, a place is authen­t­ic when its char­ac­ter comes from the loc­al com­munity; when res­id­ents still want to meet the ‘oth­er’, to inter­act, even if only a greeting.

It’s the lady who smiles at you from her front door, who offers inform­a­tion without being asked, often bridging the lan­guage gap with a mix of hers andyours.

Just as a person’s authen­ti­city involves self-accept­ance, a territory’s authen­ti­city involves accept­ing those who vis­it, mak­ing guests feel genu­inely wel­come. This goes far bey­ond his­tor­ic­al her­it­age, the nat­ur­al envir­on­ment, or tra­di­tions; it is a core part of the cul­ture and a defin­ing aspect of a place’s loc­al identity.

For this to hap­pen, cer­tain con­di­tions are neces­sary. The des­tin­a­tion must be man­aged, organ­ised, and pro­moted in a way that allows res­id­ents to main­tain a healthy rela­tion­ship with tour­ism, wheth­er they work in the sec­tor ornot.

Per­haps this is a uto­pi­an aspir­a­tion, but it is pre­cisely what made me feel like a ‘tem­por­ary cit­izen’ on a Greek island this sum­mer, and it’s why I wish to return in future.

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Shamiso Nyajeka, Dean of the School of Hospitality, PSE-Pour un Sourire d’enfant, Cambodia

Under­stand­ing authen­ti­city depends on the hat one is wearing.

For the schol­ar, it is some­thing to ana­lyse, define, and link with the­ory. For a busi­ness, it can be part of a mar­ket­ing strategy that, if pack­aged well, can drive sales. A tour­ist reveals what it means to them through their expect­a­tions, demands, and reviews.

At the heart of it all is the host com­munity. They are the face of authen­ti­city, often bal­an­cing simply liv­ing their lives with the pres­sure to meet vis­it­or expectations.

Some time ago, my fresh­man stu­dents asked me to join them on their semester break trip to Siem Reap. Even though it was meant to be a hol­i­day, my edu­cat­or brain kept switch­ing on, dis­sect­ing everything, and almost turn­ing the trip into a casestudy!

We opted for a homestay with one student’s fam­ily, where we planted rice, shared meals, vis­ited the pagoda, and enjoyed even­ings of karaoke and storytelling. Noth­ing was per­formed or pack­aged; the fam­ily was keen to teach us their ways and wel­comed us into their dailylife.

Before leav­ing, as is com­mon in Khmer etiquette, we showed our appre­ci­ation to the host­ess with a bas­ket of fruit, a ges­ture that clearly meant a lot tothem.

So, what is authen­ti­city, and can it be pack­aged orsold?

From that Siem Reap exper­i­ence, it can­not be man­u­fac­tured or staged. It is found in ordin­ary moments shared openly, without sug­ar­coat­ing or extra effort to impress.

It is not just vis­it­ors enjoy­ing the exper­i­ence, but hosts tak­ing pride in shar­ing their lives, and the mutu­al appre­ci­ation exchanged in the process.

Tour­ism pro­fes­sion­als can­not sell that feel­ing; at best, they can cre­ate the con­di­tions for it: respect, hon­esty, and genu­ine exchange.

In the end, authen­ti­city belongs to the traveller’s own experience.

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“GT” Insight BiteX(‘X’ is up toyou)

The “Good Tour­ism” Blogoffers a great oppor­tun­ity to any travel & tour­ism stake­hold­er who wishes to express them­self in writ­ing for the bene­fit of “GT’s” open-minded readers.

To fea­ture in the next “GT” Insight Bites com­pil­a­tion, sendno more than300 words (300 wordsor few­er(=300 words)) on any tour­ism-related idea or con­cern you mayhave.

Don’t use AI. if you lack con­fid­ence in writ­ing in plain Eng­lish, “GT’s” pub­lish­er will per­son­ally help with copy edit­ing.“GT” doesn’t judge. “GT” publishes.

Send your “GT” Insight Bite and pic­ture to[emailprotected].

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Iran: The challenges of domestic overtourism in thenorth

S Fatemeh Mostafavi Shirazi, visiting scholar, Iran

Iran’s domest­ic tour­ists favour the north­ern provinces in Septem­ber, espe­cially areas sur­round­ing the Caspi­an Sea.This sea­son­al flow has become a defin­ing fea­ture of domest­ic mobil­ity in the country.

How­ever, it also poses sig­ni­fic­ant chal­lenges for host communities.

Inform­al con­ver­sa­tions I’ve had with res­id­ents in the north revealed that they exper­i­ence Septem­ber as a peri­od of dis­rup­tion. Traffic, noise, envir­on­ment­al degrad­a­tion, and the dis­turb­ance of loc­al routines were fre­quently cited as neg­at­ives. Many loc­als described them­selves as increas­ingly dis­sat­is­fied with this annu­alcycle.

A cent­ral ques­tion arises: why do so many domest­ic tour­ists repeatedly choose the same region each Septem­ber, des­pite its over­crowding?To explore this, I con­duc­ted inform­al talks with 50 Ira­ni­ans who vis­it north­ern provinces every sum­mer. My find­ings high­light sev­er­al explan­at­ory factors:

  1. There is lim­ited pub­lic aware­ness of the diversity of attrac­tions in Iran. Des­pite the country’s rich cul­tur­al her­it­age and diverse geo­graphy, many domest­ic tour­ists are unfa­mil­i­ar with des­tin­a­tions oth­er than thenorth.
  2. The Caspi­an Sea is par­tic­u­larly appeal­ing to fam­il­ies with chil­dren who enjoy swim­ming and sea­side activities.
  3. The forests and moun­tains of the north present a refresh­ing con­trast to the arid land­scapes of much of cent­ral and south­ernIran.
  4. Afford­ab­il­ity and con­veni­ence play an import­ant role. Many trav­el­lers stated that stay­ing in ren­ted houses or vil­las is less costly and more flex­ible than hotels, rein­for­cing the habit of annu­al return.

These atti­tudes demon­strate how domest­ic tour­ism in Iran is shaped by both cul­tur­al routines and struc­tur­al lim­it­a­tions in des­tin­a­tion promotion.

How­ever, the res­ult­ing sea­son­al con­cen­tra­tion of vis­it­ors in north­ern Iran high­lights the urgent need for sus­tain­able tour­ism man­age­ment strategies that bal­ance vis­it­or demand with the well-being of host communities.

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What do youthink?

In a com­ment below share your own thoughtsabout‘authen­ti­city’ in travel & tour­ism.

SIGN INorREGISTERfirst. (After sign­ing in you will need to refresh this page to see the com­ments section.)

Orwrite a“GT” Insightor“GT” Insight Biteof your own.The “Good Tour­ism” Blogwel­comes diversity of opin­ion and per­spect­ive about travel & tour­ism, because travel & tour­ism is everyone’s business.

This is an open invit­a­tion to travel & tour­ism stake­hold­ers from any back­ground to share their thoughts in plain Eng­lish with a glob­al industry audience.

“GT” doesn’t judge. “GT” pub­lishes.“GT” is where free thought travels.

If you think the tour­ism media land­scape is bet­ter with “GT” in it, then please…

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Previous “GT” Insight Bites

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What is ‘authen­ti­city’ in travel & tour­ism? Base image gen­er­ated by Google Gemini.

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