Laoag Cook-Off Highlights Moringa’s Culinary Potential

Participants demonstrated culinary creativity by transforming moringa into unique and appealing snack recipes.

DTI To Set Up 3 More Negosyo Centers In Negros Oriental

The expansion of Negosyo Centers will provide greater access to business registration, advisory, and support services.

Iloilo City Turns Plastic Bottles Into Free WiFi Via Recycling Drive

The project combines environmental protection and digital access by rewarding recycling efforts with internet connectivity.

Ilocos Norte Town Pushes Segregation Via Waste-For-Rice Drive

Local officials are using innovative incentives to encourage residents to participate in environmental protection efforts.
Home Society Travel DOT-Cordillera Sets Eyes On Foreigners To Hike Tourist Arrivals

DOT-Cordillera Sets Eyes On Foreigners To Hike Tourist Arrivals

0
191

The Department of Tourism (DOT) in the Cordillera Administrative Region (CAR) is mounting promotional activities to lure more foreign tourists to visit the region.

“We attend major local travel fairs conducted by the DOT and the private tour operators in all regions in the country. We also attend international travel fairs so that we can promote the Cordillera,” Jovita Ganongan, regional director of the DOT-CAR, said in a phone interview on Tuesday.

Ganongan said these international tourism marketing campaigns aim to lure foreign tourists “for them to see the beauty of our place and the unique adventures and offerings that we have in the provinces of the Cordillera.”

She said the Cordillera region’s diverse tourism offerings—including creative, wellness, gastronomy, farm-to-table, cultural and heritage, weaving, mountain, sports and adventure, and golf experiences—continue to attract foreign tourists.

DOT-CAR records showed Americans topped foreign tourist arrivals in the Cordillera, followed by the French, Koreans, Canadians, Japanese, British, Chinese, Australians, Germans, and Israelis.

A total of 1,572,655 local tourists and 53,948 foreign tourists arrived in the Cordillera in 2025.

Last year, there were also 6.7 million same-day tourists who arrived in the Cordillera, mostly in Baguio City.

Ganongan said that each local government has been doing its own share of promoting its respective areas, especially with fuel prices still up, making travel difficult for many locals.

“We must be on the move to boost our tourism offerings. We must capitalize on what is unique in every province and what is different from the other destinations so that tourists will choose us,” she added. (PNA)

Society Magazine