Spain is likely to attract 100 million ​foreign tourists this year with the number of visitors expected to grow during the ‌key summer season helped by uncertainty in the Middle East, Tourism Minister Jordi Hereu told reporters on Monday.

The world's second-most-visited country after France welcomed 96.8 million tourists in 2025, which represented a record high and ​an increase of 3.2 per cent compared with the previous year.

"We will probably reach (100 million) if ​this trend continues. It would be the natural outcome," Hereu said.

The ⁠government estimates tourists will contribute €64 billion ($73 billion) to the economy between June and September, up ​10 per cent from the same period last year, reinforcing tourism's role as a key driver of Spain's ​economic growth and helping the country outperform its European peers.

This summer, some 43 million international tourists are forecast to visit Spain, 6 per cent more than in the June-September period last year. The government sees the number of ​arrivals rising — like it did in the spring — despite the geopolitical uncertainty surrounding the US-Israeli war on ​Iran.

Over the past few months, turmoil in the Middle East diverted some travellers from destinations in the ‌region ⁠and boosted demand for southern Mediterranean countries, including Spain.

"Three months ago, we thought the conflict in the Middle East could slow tourist arrivals, but the data shows remarkable resilience despite the circumstances," Hereu said.

By October 1, visitor arrivals are forecast to climb to nearly 80 million, a stronger ​performance than authorities expected ​in March.

While traditional ⁠sun-and-beach destinations are expected to continue growing this summer, the government said inland regions will likely see even bigger gains, helped in part ​by the total solar eclipse in August, which will be visible across ​a broad ⁠swathe of rural and northern Spain.

Hereu said many rural accommodations have been fully booked because of interest in the eclipse.