This article explains a recent study showing how a specialized tour operator model preserves local income and helps mitigate overtourism in sensitive destinations.
Key findings: revenue retention and structural design
A research paper by Culture Discovery Vacations (CDV), published on the Social Science Research Network (SSRN), documents 19 years of operational data revealing that CDV’s model retains 72% of gross revenue within local communities. This figure sharply contrasts with typical industry retention rates of 20–30%, and the study reports that CDV sustains healthy company economics with net profit margins around 18%, comparable to conventional operators.
The study links these outcomes to a deliberately engineered set of business practices designed to prevent revenue extraction and maintain cultural integrity at destination level. Its implications point toward an operational path that balances profitability with community resilience.
Three structural constraints at the core of the model
- No commission-based vendor relationships: CDV refuses commissions and incentive-driven arrangements with local suppliers.
- Volume discipline: Group sizes are capped at 12–18 travelers with an annual limit of roughly 14 weeks per destination.
- Local ownership requirement: All business partners must be 100% locally owned family businesses.
Measured outcomes in two Italian destinations
The paper evaluates long-term results in two contrasting Italian contexts. In Soriano nel Cimino, where CDV has operated since 2006, the population has remained stable at about 8,000 and local business ownership has stayed above 95%. CDV reports distributing approximately €286,200 (about $312,000) annually to some 37–38 partner families, with 100% partner retention over the 19-year period except for retirements.
By contrast, in Civita di Bagnoregio, where CDV ceased operations in 2018, visitor numbers surged to roughly 850,000 annually while the resident population fell from 18 to 11. The commercial landscape shifted toward hotels, restaurants and souvenir shops, and essential local services such as the grocery store closed. CDV ended operations after determining the original cultural experience was no longer viable.
Comparative snapshot
| Metric | CDV Model | Industry Average |
|---|---|---|
| Local revenue retention | 72% | 20–30% |
| Net profit margin | ~18% | Comparable |
| Group size policy | 12–18 travelers | Often larger, variable |
| Local ownership | Mandatory 100% family-owned | Not typically required |
Policy and licensing recommendations
The study urges municipalities and destination managers to consider regulatory measures that institutionalize similar constraints: requiring local ownership for tourism licenses, prohibiting commission-based vendor relationships, and setting operator volume limits. The authors argue that such structural interventions can prevent revenue extraction and protect local economies before harsher, reactive measures—like blanket bans or extreme visitor caps—become necessary.
Historical context: overtourism and its management
Overtourism emerged as a widely recognized problem in the early 2010s as mass tourism concentrated in a small number of attractive urban and cultural destinations. Cities such as Venice, Barcelona and Amsterdam became case studies for the social, environmental and economic stresses induced by high visitor numbers. Municipal responses have included visitor taxes, accommodation restrictions, limits on short-term rentals and controlled access to fragile sites.
Tour operators historically contributed to both the benefits and burdens of tourism. In many cases, large-scale packaged tours drove volume without necessarily creating sustained local economic linkages; profits flowed through international intermediaries and central booking platforms, leaving local suppliers with a small share. The CDV study reframes operator strategy by showing it is possible to design an operator model that redirects a far greater portion of gross receipts to local stakeholders while preserving viable business returns.
How the model compares with past approaches
- Traditional mass-tourism models emphasize scale, often at the expense of local value capture.
- Community-based tourism approaches prioritize local ownership but sometimes lack scalable governance and consistent visitor management.
- CDV’s hybrid shows that structural rules embedded in operator contracts and licensing can combine local retention with operational sustainability.
Implications for destinations and coastal economies
While the study focuses on inland cultural towns, the findings carry relevance for coastal and marine destinations, including marinas, small islands and waterfront towns that host charter operators and yachting activity. Where tourism-driven development generates displacement or homogenization of services, adoption of local-ownership requirements, limits on operator volume, and the elimination of commission-driven supplier relationships could help retain incomes in local hands—supporting small family-run harbors, fisheries, and artisan service providers.
Applied to seaside contexts, these measures could ensure that marina fees, mooring services, and visitor spending on activities such as fishing, local excursions, and beach-based services circulate through local supply chains rather than being siphoned off by outside intermediaries. Regulatory coordination at the municipal level would be necessary to create consistent licensing conditions across harbors, waterfront promenades and island ports.
Practical considerations for adoption
- Establish transparent contracting norms that favor local suppliers and require disclosure of ownership.
- Define and enforce volume caps for operators servicing sensitive harbors or small islands.
- Monitor socio-economic indicators—population stability, business ownership, and service diversity—to detect early signs of harmful change.
Limitations and caution
The research recognizes that volume discipline alone cannot fully insulate a destination from broader market pressures and infrastructural changes. In Civita di Bagnoregio, for example, high visitor numbers had already triggered deep structural shifts that CDV’s model could not reverse. The study therefore emphasizes destination-level policy coordination as a complement to operator-level practices.
In summary, the CDV study presents a replicable operational framework that can increase local revenue retention and reduce extractive tourism dynamics while maintaining viable margins. For destinations seeking to protect cultural authenticity and preserve local ownership—whether inland towns or coastal communities with marinas and small harbors—mixing business rules with sensible regulatory oversight offers a promising route forward.
GetBoat is always keeping an eye on the latest tourism news and developments; for those tracking impacts on destinations, marinas, yachting communities and broader travel activity, this study highlights important tools—ownership policies, volume constraints and commission bans—that can help sustain local economies and preserve the character of beaches, waterfronts, and cultural sites. Explore further insights on trends affecting yacht and charter destinations, boating activity, seaside marinas and tourism policy at GetBoat.com.
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