
Mount Gnomon Farm, Penguin
Boomtown Pictures
Agritourism helps create additional reasons for visitors to disperse across Tasmania and represents an opportunity for our tourism sector. Naturally aligned to our agricultural strengths, our updated research on agritourism helps existing and emerging tourism operators understand how they may leverage this growth market opportunity to shape or expand their visitor offering.
We have completed a multiphased research program into the agritourism opportunity for Tasmania. Here is what the data tells us and what it means for you as an operator.
Visiting cafes and restaurants, farmers markets and tasting tours are the most common agritourism activities in Tasmania. There is a clear gap between what visitors want to do and what they actually get to do. Farming tours, make your own experiences and cooking lessons with local produce are undersupplied relative to demand. These are the experiences with room to grow.
When reaching potential visitors, think digital first. Search engines are the number one planning tool, word of mouth is second and social media is third. Shareable experiences and authentic stories drive discovery. The most valuable thing you can do is make the story of your place easy to find, easy to tell and worth passing on.
Collaboration also matters. Clustering complementary experiences, whether that is pairing a wine trail with a cheese maker and a farm stay, helps create the kind of itinerary that turns a weekend into a longer trip and a satisfied visitor into an advocate.

The Agrarian Kitchen, New Norfolk
Ros Wharton

Lavender Goat Farm, Petcheys Bay
Stu Gibson
Considerable research has been done on the opportunity for agritourism in Australia by Tourism Research Australia. You may find this useful for broader context. Agritourism is a growing area and we believe Tasmania can benefit from growing this sector.
This Tourism Research Australia (TRA) report, prepared in conjunction with Tourism Australia (TA), uses the latest TRA and TA data to measure and evaluate agritourism, track growth and measure impact.
In 2024, engagement with agritourism in Australia grew in trips, nights and spend, demonstrating the sector's contribution to visitor economy growth. The data shows visitors who engage in an agritourism activity during their trip have higher than average spend per trip and spend per night than overall travellers within Australia.