Baku City, Flame Towers

Azerbaijan’s Tourism Takes a Hit Amid India–Pakistan Rift: What Went Wrong and What’s Next

Bagpackandgo
4 Min Read

Azerbaijan’s emerging tourism boom is facing a setback following its support for Pakistan during the recent conflict with India. Indian cancellations surged 250%, and bookings dropped by 60%, wiping out the momentum built over recent years. Now, Azerbaijan’s tourism board is racing to pivot and restore its travel appeal.

Background: Political Ties Turn into Tourism Backlash

  • In May 2025, after India’s Operation Sindoor and the subsequent escalation with Pakistan, both Turkey and Azerbaijan publicly backed Pakistan.
  • Indian platforms like MakeMyTrip reported booking drops of 60% to these countries and a 250% spike in cancellations for Azerbaijan.  
  • Voice of the boycott quickly followed: industrialist Harsh Goenka called on Indians to “skip these two places,” citing ₹4,000 cr in Indian tourism spend lost.  

The Fallout: Tourism & Economic Toll

  • Indian tourists dropped from roughly 243,000 in 2024 to a sharp fall in May 2025—accounting for an estimated $310 million in lost revenue. India had become Azerbaijan’s fourth-largest source market.  
  • While visits from Russia, Iran, and Gulf countries remained steady, Indian visitor numbers plunged, dragging down the overall 1.3% increase in total arrivals (735,800 in Jan–Apr 2025).
  • The wider anti-Turkish/Azerbaijani sentiment in India also affected businesses—tour operators, airlines, and hotels saw widespread cancellations.
Picture credits: Iman Gallery | Pexels

Why Azerbaijan Is Particularity Vulnerable

  • Azerbaijan had invested heavily in the Indian travel market, featuring at major expos like SATTE 2025 in New Delhi and launching direct flights via AZAL, leading to impressive 85% spike in South Asian arrivals in 2024.  
  • Indian tourists once made 19.6% of overnight stays in Azerbaijan in early 2025, roughly half a million nights. Their sudden departure unveils a heavy dependency in just a few months.  

Azerbaijan’s Plan to Regain Ground

The Azerbaijan Tourism Board (ATB) has launched a counter-offensive across multiple markets:

  1. Market Diversification:
    • Strengthening ties with Central Asian countries (Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan) and promoting elite tourism products like ski resorts and business travel.
    • Doubling down on growing arrivals from Israel, China, Canada, and the U.S., all posting double-digit growth.
  2. New Routes & Connectivity:
    • Expanding AZAL services, including direct flights to Seoul from mid-2025, and continuing twice-weekly service with Pakistan to restore regional ties.
  3. Promotional Revamps:
    • Active engagement in tourism expos: SATTE New Delhi, OTM Mumbai, Pakistan Travel Mart, and Luxury Travel Mart in Central Asia.  
    • Showcasing sustainable, wellness, wine, ski, and heritage tourism to reduce reliance on a single source market.
  4. Domestic Infrastructure & Quality Push:
    • Upgrading accommodations, reducing regional service cost disparities, and improving transit and inter-city tourism to complement Baku’s appeal.  
Picture credits: Wikimedia Commons

What Lies Ahead

  • Indian market will take time to rebuild. Political sentiment and travel patterns may stay affected until diplomatic conditions shift.
  • Azerbaijan’s broadened market strategy—including direct flights to Asia, event-based tourism, and regional partnerships—is critical.
  • Yet, with over 50% of tourism stays originating from India and Gulf, sustained effort in infrastructure and diplomacy will be needed to buffer future shocks.

References

  1. Indian travel firms report travel plunge over Azerbaijan’s political stance — Reuters.  
  2. Boycott calls hit bookings — MakeMyTrip, EaseMyTrip, ixigo data.  
  3. Harsh Goenka’s boycott appeal on X.  
  4. Azerbaijan’s tourism stats & Indian traveler spending ~ $308m–311m.  
  5. Azerbaijan tourism diversification plans — Azernews & national expo reports.
  6. New flight routes via AZAL to Seoul and Pakistan.  
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