Carmel and Tourism
Carmel-by-the-Sea is an internationally known destination that we all benefit, especially from the tax dollars those visits leave behind by staying at our hotels, eating at our restaurants, and enjoying galleries, theaters, shops, etc. Visitors also bring diversity and potential future residents as they like what they see enough to move in. We all welcome visitors and share the bounty of what nature brings, our history, our culture, our architecture, and everything our predecessors helped create. We (residents and visitors alike) are also blessed to enjoy the benefits that go beyond what is mentioned above - including outstanding police/fire/ambulance services with staffing and equipment right in our one square mile town. Plus 2 libraries that enrich our citizenry and beyond. And there are many generous and active non-profit community organizations that invest in helping preserve our cherished Village and provide activities, services and connection opportunities for the people that live here (check out this CRA page for many of them, including our CRA!). However, similar to most past decades, residents have growing concerns on tourism impacts to our Village. Word of mouth (especially social media now) has been key in sharing the bounty of this city we call home. Especially as residents, we also have a responsibility to protect and preserve what surrounds us - for future decades of residents and visitors to come. Over reactions? As you may have read in the press (as below) or on social media, our Village can receive media coverage with a big reach and frequency. For example, Carmel has received a lot of coverage on the upcoming Summer rollout of Standard Addresses for the first time in over 100 years. Our City Council has been working to increase the pace and dollars needed to accelerate completion of a backlog of infrastructure projects around town. With that in mind, they raised the possible tightening of dollars invested in marketing - thus the press coverage roster below. Considering this funding change requires greater understanding with the positives or negatives. Working together with our Marketing Partners, Our Local Businesses, Our City Staff, our City Council and Our Residents - we need to better understand the facts, possibilities, the positives/negatives, the costs, the benefits of the approaches and optimization ahead. Amazing people call Carmel-by-the-Sea home and need to be a part of planning this road ahead - that produce positive outcomes. Recent Tourism Press Coverage HERE is a Daily Mail 6/24/26 article "Gorgeous coastal hideaway pulls plug on its $300k tourist fund because locals don't want any more people visiting" Marketing Partners of Carmel-by-the-Sea During our Village FY Budget cycle on May 5 2026, each of these relevant organizations presented and spoke about how they focus their marketing as below 20260505-Carmel Chamber Presentation.pdf Tourism Management Challenges - Are Not New When you read from the many articles and books written about our Village history, and many articles authored by CRA in the Voice and its prior publications - tourism has been a concern for at least 50 years or more. (See CRA's Carmel Reading webpage HERE).
With Our Monterey Peninsula Neighbors Our Village is not alone in welcoming Visitors while we protect and preserve what we have to enjoy. Bixby Bridge, Big Sur, Point Lobos in recent times have seen increased visitors from both far and near. Unfortunately this increase has created congestion, unwelcome behaviors and can create safety risks. And when Visitors stop in Carmel they commonly visit neighboring Coastal Cites and offerings including the Monterey Aquarium, 17 Mile Drive, golfing, wineries and more outdoor beach experiences - this list goes on. How we share while optimizing tourism will be considered and rolled out in phases in the months to come - for everyones benefit and enjoyment.
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