PRESS RELEASE
- National pride significantly boosted by successful tournament
- £4.3 billion generated in economic output
- 242,000 international visitors stayed an average of 17 days each in Japan, providing tourism and economic benefits to the host nation
- 46,000 jobs created or sustained for the tournament
- Strong regional impact at the heart of nationwide benefits
- Significant rugby and community sport’s infrastructure legacy, including Kamaishi Recovery Memorial Stadium
- Outcomes reinforce Japan’s stature as a major commercial rugby market
Japan 2019 was the most economically successful Rugby World Cup ever, with nearly £4.3 billion generated in economic output according to The economic impact of Rugby World Cup 2019 report published by EY today.
Rugby World Cup 2019 has been heralded as the best to date, delivering a unique experience for visiting fans, showcasing Japan’s renowned culture and spirit of Omotenashi and significantly boosting national pride. Delivering unforgettable moments on and off the field, the tournament has been reinforced as one of the world’s most prestigious and exciting sports events.
The 44-day global celebration of rugby, hosted across 12 cities the length and breadth of Japan, captured the imagination of a nation and fans around the world. It was the most competitive, best attended, most viewed, most socially engaged and most commercially successful of the nine men’s tournaments to date and the biggest sporting event of 2019.
Rugby World Cup 2019 was also the most economically successful event in Japanese sporting history, underscoring the nationwide approach to host Asia’s first tournament.
The EY report, launched during a special webinar event in Tokyo today, outlines how Rugby World Cup 2019 generated £4.3 billion in output and added £2.3 billion to Japan’s GDP. It attracted 242,000 international fans from 178 nations, who stayed an average of 17 days, visiting five cities on average. More than 60 per cent of fans were visiting the country for the first time, while their daily spend was 4.6 times higher than that spent by the average visitor to Japan in 2018.
Aside from a record economic impact footprint that reached from Sapporo in the north to Kumamoto in the south, the tournament also created or sustained 46,000 jobs and 13,000 volunteer roles, many of whom will be supporting Tokyo 2020.
The host’s ticketing strategy also proved successful with a total of 1.83 million tickets sold. The 99 per cent attendance versus capacity rate across the 45 matches is the most successful in Rugby World Cup history and among the most successful major sports events of all time. It was the biggest single-sport event ever held in Japan. In addition, a record 1.13 million fans attended one or more of the 16 official fanzones despite two typhoons during the event.
Stadia packed with Japanese fans (more than 50 per cent attending a rugby match for the first time) combined with joyous overseas fans created a special atmosphere, The performance of Japan’s national team – the Brave Blossoms – in reaching the quarter-finals for the first time played a leading role in boosting national pride with 90 per cent of people in Japan believing that hosting captured the nation’s imagination, boosting pride, excitement and engagement.
A special, unforgettable, record-breaking tournament
- Asia and Japan’s first Rugby World Cup
- Unprecedented 44-day global shop window for Japan and rugby
- Record nationwide economic impact beyond Tokyo
- 242,000 international visitors staying average of 17 days v 14 days for RWC 2015
- 60 per cent of fans visiting Japan for the first time
- 90 per cent of fans said they would return to Japan
- 80 per cent of fans said they had an exceptional experience
- £4.3 billion total economic impact/£2.3 billion GDP increase
- £2.3 billion spent in Japan by international visitors
- RWC 2019 visiting fans spent 4.6 times more than the average visitor to Japan in 2018
- 46,340 jobs created or supported for the tournament
- RWC 2019 visitors stayed 17 days, compared to 14 days average at RWC 2015
- £2m pledged for the Childfund Pass It Back programme, a partnership between Childfund, World Rugby, Asia Rugby and the JRFU
- 2.25 million people introduced to rugby in Asia via the Impact Beyond programme (769,000 children involved in tag rugby in elementary schools in Japan)
- Significant infrastructure legacy for rugby and community sport, including the Kamaishi Recovery Memorial Stadium
Click here for the EY report and RWC press release in full.