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The year had started strongly, “with 112,000 foreign visitors in the first two months, which is very good”, said Adnan al-Sawair, chairman of the board of commissioners of the Petra tourism authority.

“But everything changed with the war,” he said. The impact was immediate, with visitor numbers to Petra in March and April dropping to between 28,000 and 30,000.

Cancellations have been so severe that some hotels are considering closing.

Authorities have launched a scheme to encourage domestic tourism, but its impact remains “negligible”, Sawair said, as the sector depends above all on foreign tour groups.

Since the start of the war, debris from drones and missiles has fallen on the kingdom, which does not host any foreign military bases but does have limited contingents from several countries under collective defence and cooperation agreements.

Jordan’s army said 281 Iranian missiles and drones had been fired at the country from the war’s onset until the beginning of the April ceasefire, most of them intercepted.

Before the war, booking calendars at travel agencies were almost full, according to the national association. They then emptied abruptly, causing a crisis for 1,400 licensed guides.

Faced with the lack of customers, souvenir seller Ibrahim al-Atmeh packed up his wares earlier than usual.

“We were hoping for an excellent spring season, but … our hopes are gone,” the 31-year-old said.


Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait and Bahrain denounce strikes, as Germany, UK and Canada urge Iran to return to talks.

Published On 5 May 2026