Impacts of Visitor
Spending on Local Economy:
Crater Lake National
Park, 2001
Visitor Spending
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Spending averages were estimated from the Crater
Lake NP Visitor Study. Spending averages were computed on a party trip basis for
each segment and then converted to a party night basis by dividing by the
average length of stay in the region. The survey covered expenditures that
occurred within 100 miles of the park. Spending averages per party per night by
segment are shown in Table 6.
Table 5. Crater Lake NP visitor spending by lodging segments in
local area ($ per party day)

Local and non-local day visitors spent about $50
per party per day. Campers either staying inside or outside the park spent
around $60 dollars per day. Visitors staying at park hotels spent $237 per day
or $40 dollars more than visitors staying hotels outside the park. The
differences are mainly from the higher expenses on the lodging and food service
inside the park. The corresponding nightly room rate inside the park was $137
and $94 for lodges outside the park. Backcountry campers spent around $38
dollars per party day, or about $58 for a 1.5- night stay5.
Total visitor spending is calculated by
multiplying the number of party- nights in Table 4 by the spending averages in
Table 5. The calculations are carried out segment by segment, summing across the
seven segments to obtain the total. Visitors to Crater Lake NP in 2001 spent
$30.7 million in the local area (Table 6). Visitors spent $10.8 million on
motel/hotel rooms, $6.6 million on restaurant meals, and $4.0 million on
souvenirs. Groups staying in area motels contributed about 64 percent ($19.6
million) of the total spending to the region followed by visitors staying at
campgrounds outside the park (11%) and day visitors coming from outside the
region (10%).
Table 6. Total spending by Crater Lake NP visitors in 2001
($000’s)

Dean Runyan Associates (2002) estimates that
travelers spent $496 million in the three counties of East Douglas ($143
million), Jackson ($247 million) and Klamath ($106 million) in 2000. This
spending includes all expenditures associated with trips of 50 miles or more
away from home by domestic and foreign travelers6.
Tourist spending generated a total of 8,760 jobs and 19.7 million in taxes in
the three county area.
The $31 million spent by Crater Lake NP visitors
in 2001 represents about 6% of all tourist spending in the region and about 10%
of lodging sales. Based on this comparison, park visitors appear to be more
likely than other tourists to be staying overnight in commercial lodging in the
three county area. As visitors staying in hotels and motels spend considerably
more than other segments, encouraging overnight stays helps to increase local
economic impacts.