Tourism Carrying Capacity Assessment
Tourism carrying capacity assessment estimates the maximum level of visitor use a destination or site can sustain before its environment, infrastructure, host community, or visitor experience begins to deteriorate unacceptably. The concept, given its influential tourism formulation by A. M. O'Reilly in 1986, recognises that carrying capacity is not a single number but a set of limits operating across distinct dimensions — physical and ecological capacity on the resource side, social capacity on the host and visitor side, and economic capacity on the activity side — with the binding constraint being whichever is reached first. Carrying capacity is the conceptual engine behind Butler's Tourism Area Life Cycle, explaining why unmanaged growth leads to stagnation, and it underpins much of sustainable destination management even as it has been refined into more flexible, indicator-based frameworks.
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Sources
- O'Reilly, A. M. (1986). Tourism carrying capacity: concept and issues. Tourism Management, 7(4), 254-258. DOI: 10.1016/0261-5177(86)90035-X ↗
- Butler, R. W. (1980). The concept of a tourist area cycle of evolution: implications for management of resources. Canadian Geographer / Le Géographe canadien, 24(1), 5-12. DOI: 10.1111/j.1541-0064.1980.tb00970.x ↗
How to cite this page
ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Tourism Carrying Capacity Assessment (TCC). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/en/tourism-studies/tourism-carrying-capacity
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- Limits of Acceptable ChangeTourism Recreation↔ compare
- Tourism Area Life CycleTourism Studies↔ compare