
Foto: Backlinks.lv | Autors: Rolands Bergs | 2026.02.02
Latvia is often framed as a leisure destination (Art Nouveau Riga, Baltic coastline, small-city charm). But the newest numbers suggest another narrative is strengthening fast: investment-led business travel.

Pilsētas centrā atvērts biljarda un novusa klubs "Zemgale", piedāvājot daudzveidīgas atpūtas iespējas gan aktīvai, gan mierīgai laika pavadīšanai.
Bauskas TIC
When foreign capital rises, it doesn’t just show up in balance sheets. It shows up in airport flows, hotel midweek occupancy, venue calendars, site visits, supplier meetings, recruitment trips, and “extended stay” business travel. For Latvia’s travel industry, that’s a big deal—because business travel typically spends more per day, is less seasonal, and fuels MICE (meetings, incentives, conferences, exhibitions).
The headline figures that matter for travel
Recent reporting in Latvia points to a clear uptick in investment activity:
On top of that, Latvia’s investment agency (LIAA) reported that 31 investment projects were launched in 2025, with a total value of €1.01 billion and 1,350 new jobs expected.
For travel professionals, these aren’t abstract numbers. They are early indicators of more:
Riga Airport: stable volumes, real business signals
Air connectivity and passenger stability are the backbone of any business-travel rebound. Riga Airport reported that 2025 passenger volume slightly exceeded 7.1 million, roughly matching the previous year, while cargo volumes grew by 7%.
Even more interesting is the passenger structure:
That transfer share matters because it makes Riga not only a destination but a regional connector, which is attractive for international companies that need efficient routing for teams moving across Northern Europe.
Latvia is explicitly pushing “business tourism”
Latvia isn’t treating business tourism as a side quest. Official messaging has been clear: business tourism is seen as a growth lever.
A government business portal notes that 1.6 million foreign guests were accommodated in Latvian hotels in 2024 (a 14% increase year-on-year), and it adds that Riga accounts for about 75% of foreign visitors—with business tourism forming a major part of that flow.
This supports the practical reality many hoteliers and DMCs already feel: Riga is where midweek demand and repeat corporate travel is most visible—and where MICE capacity upgrades can move the needle fastest.
Why this matters for Travelnews.lv readers: the “business travel multiplier”
Investment-led travel behaves differently from pure leisure demand:
1) It fills the calendar outside peak leisure months
Corporate travel often rises in:
That means steadier hotel demand, smoother staffing, and more reliable revenue planning.
2) It creates “long-stay” travel patterns
New projects and joint ventures bring:
This boosts demand for:
3) It grows MICE demand in a practical way
Joint ventures and investment projects generate:
The MICE ecosystem depends on these recurring, business-driven events—not just one-off mega conferences.
Where Latvia might feel the travel impact first
Riga stays the main hub
With the majority of international arrivals concentrated in Riga, the capital remains the biggest “immediate winner” for corporate travel and events.
Regional spillover is real - but needs packaging
Investment projects are often tied to manufacturing, energy, logistics, and tech-related facilities (LIAA explicitly highlighted sectors like bioeconomy, smart energy, high-value manufacturing, ICT).
That kind of activity often sits outside city centers, which creates opportunities for:
For regions, the win is easiest when the offer is simple and turnkey:
A quick “what to do now” checklist for travel businesses
If you sell Latvia—whether you’re a hotel, DMC, airline partner, or venue—this is the moment to sharpen the corporate offer:
Hotels / aparthotels
DMCs
Venues / MICE
Transport
A note for investors and international founders traveling to Latvia
A lot of business travel starts with one practical step: company formation in Latvia to contract, invoice, hire, or open accounts. That’s where a service like latviacompanies.com typically fits in—helping foreign founders register and structure a Latvian company cleanly so the travel turns into real operations (not just exploratory visits).
Bottom line
Latvia’s 2026 travel outlook isn’t only about city breaks and summer weekends. The latest investment and business formation figures point to a stronger story in corporate travel and MICE, with Riga as the clear hub and growing chances for regional spillover.