Tanzania Tourism Can Learn From Caribbean Islands

Following his recent week-long trip to several of the Caribbean islands including Cuba, Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago, ETurboNews (ETN) has reported that Tanzania’s President Jakaya Kikwete believes that the Tanzania tourism industry can learn a lot from the Caribbean beach tourism.

According to President Kikwete, the development of Caribbean tourism locations offers numerous interesting and important lessons for Tanzania beach tourism as far as performance, infrastructure and the provision of services to tourists is concerned.

“I was very impressed by tourism in Trinidad and Tobago, Cuba and Jamaica,” he said in the ETN report.

In addition the ETN report also indicated that President Kikwete has expressed the need for increased investment in the sector in order for his country to better exploit the opportunities that are available in its own unexplored beaches, which span nearly 1,000 kilometers from north to south.

Tanzania Investment Guide 2026 Free Edition

During his Caribbean trip, President Kikwete not only toured the three islands, but also attended the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting.

After returning to Tanzania, the President spoke with reporters in Dar es Salaam where, according to ETN, he said that in spite of the country’s impressive coastline, which extends from Tanga on the Kenyan border to the Msimbati area near the Mozambican border, Tanzania still lacks feasible investments that will attract tourists and allow them to take advantage of the country’s offerings.

According to the ETN report, President Kikwete went on to say that, unlike the Caribbean islands of Cuba and Jamaica, Tanzania has not yet been able to effectively promote investment in the profitable beach tourism sector.

The President went on to indicate that, based on the fact that wildlife-based tourist areas had attracted more than 95 percent of the country’s 950,000 tourists, the exploration of the beach tourism sector was extremely important to his country.

Compared to Jamaica, which has a population of 2.8 million and receives approximately 2.6 million annual tourists, Tanzania, which has a population of 36 million people, is currently focused on attempting to record one million tourists next year.

Tanzania Investment Guide 2026 Full Edition

According to President Kikwete, Tanzania is currently in need of effective strategize that can be implemented in order for it to best utilize its beaches on the Indian Ocean;

President Kikwete went on to explain that because the majority of tourists are interested in beach tourism and sunbathing, these Indian Ocean beaches have the potential of attracting numerous foreign visitors.

In order to accomplish this, the President said that the country would need to build exciting hotels along the beaches.

In addition, the President also indicated that, through the implementation of these and other strategic changes, beach tourism could eventually take in more revenue than the country’s traditional leader in the tourism sector, wildlife tourism.

Want to know more about Tourism in Tanzania? Our free overview of the Tanzania Business and Investment Guide 2026 covers Tourism, plus key sectors and investment opportunities. The complete 141-page edition includes policies, taxation, key regulations, full macroeconomic data, and sources.

Download Free OverviewGet the Full Guide
Related Posts
Tanzania Minister Ashatu Kijaji Parliament Bunge
Read More

Tanzania Tourism Budget 2026/2027 of TZS 334.35 Billion Targets 20% GDP Share, with Sector Earnings at USD 4.4 Billion and 5.93 Million Tourists

Tanzania’s Minister of Natural Resources and Tourism, Dr. Ashatu Kijaji, tabled a TZS 334.35 billion budget for the Ministry for the 2026/27 financial year, with TZS 62.30 billion directed to development across wildlife, forestry, tourism, and antiquities. Tourism earnings reached USD 4.4 billion in 2025, with 5.93 million tourists, and the Ministry projects revenue of TZS 1.49 trillion in 2026/27, more than four times its budget.
Tanzania ASSESSMENT OF ECONOMIC IMPACTS ON TANZANIA ARISING FROM THE GULF CRISIS
Read More

Tanzania Gulf Crisis Report Rates Energy, Food, Transport, Tourism and Budget at High Risk

A May 2026 rapid assessment by Tanzania's National Planning Commission and UNDP rates energy, food, transport, tourism and the Government budget at high risk from the Gulf crisis, which raised Dar es Salaam fuel prices by up to 69% between January and May 2026. The report flags a possible TZS 153.7 billion monthly customs revenue shortfall and fuel subsidy needs rising to TZS 1,384.2 billion by July, alongside buffers including a 124% food self-sufficiency ratio, USD 6.3 billion in reserves and 57 trillion cubic feet of gas.
Dodoma Region Investment Guide
Read More

Tanzania Government Calls for Investment in Dodoma Mining, Agriculture, Tourism and Trade

Tanzania's Finance Minister and the Dodoma Regional Commissioner have jointly called on investors to tap into opportunities in Dodoma's mining, agriculture, tourism, and trade, with mining flagged as the region's largest potential through value addition. Specific openings include a proposed dry port to leverage Dodoma's central location at the heart of Tanzania, the construction of five-star hotels and international conference centres, and the development of mineral processing facilities, alongside the rollout of the Tourism Development Strategy for Dodoma Region 2025–2030.