Celine Dion's Paris concerts promise to spin the money on and on
A photo shows a billboard of Canadian singer Celine Dion to announce upcoming Parisian concert dates, seen on a hotel overlooking the Boulevard Peripherique ring road at the Porte de Saint-Ouen in northern Paris on March 31, 2026.
Audio By Vocalize
Celine Dion's fans are not the only ones excited about the
megastar's new tour in Paris -- hotels, restaurants and shops are hoping for a
multimillion-euro boost from concertgoers in the French capital.
The 58-year-old Canadian singer announced last month that
she was returning to the stage for 16 concerts after a lengthy break prompted
by a rare health condition.
She could prove the latest in a series of stars to bring
with them significant economic uplift from music fans, following Taylor Swift's
record-breaking Eras Tour and as the South Korean mega-group BTS embarks on its
tour.
The Eiffel Tower was lit up to honour the return of the
singer -- who sings both in French and English -- and with the city covered in
billboards and posters, Parisian businesses are hoping the tour will prove a
major money spinner.
Dion's tour could bring an additional 300 million to 500
million euros ($351-$585 million) into the city, said Alexandra Dublanche,
president of Choose Paris Region, the organisation that promotes the wider
Paris area.
This includes ticket sales, hotel and restaurant bookings,
retail spending and more, she told AFP, adding that international visitors tend
to spend more than domestic travellers.
When Swift held four concerts in Paris in 2024, the city saw
an economic boost of around 150-180 million euros, Dublanche said.
Dion has said she was diagnosed with Stiff Person Syndrome,
an incurable autoimmune disorder, and she was forced to cancel her last tour
dates due to both the Covid pandemic and ill health.
The latest tickets for Dion's shows went on sale Friday,
with an estimated half a million fans to attend the concerts, a third from
overseas, according to Dublanche.
Others have put the figure higher, with MKG Consulting
estimating the potential economic impact at more than one billion euros,
including a 180-million-euro boost for the Parisian hotel industry.
MKG analyst Vanguelis Panayotis said the economic benefits could
reach 1.2 billion euros if taking into account transportation, and all the
associated expenses and logistics of Dion's support team as well as fans.
Swift's Eras tour became the highest-grossing musical tour
in history, with ticket revenues estimated at more than $2 billion and hundreds
of millions of dollars in extra economic activity in cities where she
performed.
"Major musical events are a driver of travel,"
said Vanessa Heydorff, managing director for France at Booking.com.
The hotel reservation site said that searches for Paris
around the dates of Dion's concerts increased by 49 percent.
The Adagio chain, which has ten hotels in the city's La
Defense district where the concerts will be held, saw a 400 percent increase in
bookings.
"This will be good for Paris because the capital is
currently experiencing a drop in hotel occupancy rates" due to the
international situation, said Didier Arino, chief executive at the consulting
firm Protourisme.
Arthur Lemoine, CEO of the high-end Galeries Lafayette
department stores, said they saw a boost in shoppers during Swift's concerts,
not only during the days when she was performing in Paris, but also around the
timing of gigs in the neighbouring city of Lyon.
"Celine Dion's presence in Paris for a month and a half
should definitely benefit business on Boulevard Haussmann," he said,
referring to the high-end street that is home to Galeries Lafayette's flagship
store.
After South Korea's BTS announced two coming concert dates
in Paris, searches for hotels in the French capital soared by 590 percent,
according to the Hotels.com website.
"This phenomenon is part of a broader trend called
'gig-tripping', where the concert becomes the starting point but not the sole
reason for booking a trip," said Heydorff, adding the challenge was to
keep the visiting fans within the region in the days before and after the
concert.
For Panayotis, at MKG, "Events that draw fans --
whether a singer, an artist or a football team -- are becoming an extremely
powerful indicator of tourism spending, something we're seeing
everywhere."
"There's a real strategic advantage [for cities] in
attracting events of this kind because they generate extremely strong economic
benefits," he said.

Join the Discussion
Share your perspective with the Citizen Digital community.
No comments yet
This discussion is waiting for your voice. Be the first to share your thoughts!