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El Barómetro Global de UFI muestra un crecimiento de la actividad ferial en varios mercados y un uso regular de las herramientas de la IA

25/07/2025

Reproducimos la nota de prensa original en inglés del 24-7-25 de UFI -The Global Association of the Exhibition Industry- sobre los resultados de su 35º Barometro Global de la industria ferial. El enlace para descargar el estudio completo se encuentra al final e incluye datos específicos para España (págs. 102 a 106) y para otros 18 países y mercados.

  • Globally, 34% of companies expect the space rented in their domestic market to increase by more than 5% in 2025 compared to 2024
  • 40% of businesses plan to increase staff numbers in the coming 6 months, despite concerns around global and national economies, plus geopolitical issues
  • 63% of companies declare using AI tools on a regular basis
  • Complete report includes dedicated profiles for 19 markets and regions, and segmentation of results for organisers, venues and service providers/suppliers

UFI, The Global Association of the Exhibition Industry, has released the latest 35th edition of its flagship Global Exhibition Barometer report, which captures the current status and outlook of the exhibition industry worldwide.

The results indicate expected growth of activity in different markets for 2025, following a year 2024 where operating profits were stable for a majority of companies: on average globally, 34% of respondents anticipate an increase of more than 5% of the space rented in their country, and 36% expect this for their company. Most businesses expected to increase by more than 5% in Brazil, India, Malaysia, Mexico, Saudi Arabia and the UAE. But this does not apply to the 3 largest markets, where most respondents anticipate either stability (in USA and Germany) or decrease (China).

In parallel, increases by more than 5% of other revenues channels are expected by 39% for services, and 26% for sponsoring opportunities.

“Global economic developments”, “Geopolitical challenges” and “State of the economy in the home market” are listed by businesses as the top issues for both short and mid-terms, preceding “Sustainability / Climate” (12% of global answers for mid-term), “Competition from within the exhibition industry” (12%), “Impact of digitalisation”, “Competition with other media” and “Internal management challenges” (all 8%) and “Regulatory / Stakeholders issues” (7%).

Still, development is underway at different levels: 8 companies out of 10 plan new activities – either in the classic range of exhibition industry activities, outside of the current product portfolios, or in both areas – , more than 6 companies out of 10 declare using AI tools on a regular basis, and 4 companies out of 10 plan to recruit in the coming 6 months.

“The UFI Barometer has been providing benchmark data across key metrics for the industry since 2009, helping organisations to gain insight on trends to help them plan their business activities. This new edition of UFI’s Barometer research highlights very contrasted outlook within most regions on one side, and very positive signs towards developments on the other. It is especially encouraging to see high levels of recruitment and also the significant proportion of companies having already integrated AI-powered tools into their systems” comments Chris Skeith OBE, Managing Director and CEO at UFI. “We are grateful to the 386 respondents from 58 countries, and whilst the results offer valuable insight, as with any research we recommend close attention to sample weighting and regional data differences. This edition also brings a new level of analysis, with segmentation of results for organisers, venues and service providers/suppliers whenever possible. We hope that this will help all readers, in addition to the detailed market profiles.”

Size and scope

This latest edition of UFI’s bi-annual industry report was concluded in July 2025 and is based on data from 386 companies in 58 countries and regions. The study includes outlooks and analysis for 19 focus countries and regions – Argentina, Australia, Brazil, China, Colombia, France, Germany, Greece, India, Italy, Malaysia, Mexico, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Spain, Thailand, the UAE, the UK, and the USA – as well as five additional aggregated regional zones. It also segments global results for organisers, venues and service providers/suppliers whenever this is relevant.

Rented space at country level

Globally, 34% of respondents expect an increase in activity of more than 5% in their country, while 48% believe it will remain stable (+/-5%). This leaves only 12% expecting a decrease of more than 5%, and 6% are uncertain. However, detailed results highlight significant differences in most regions:

• In North America, around 6 respondents out of 10 forecast an increase of more than 5% in Mexico, while the same proportion foresees a stable situation (+/- 5%) in the US.

• In Central and South America, around 7 respondents out of 10 forecast an increase of more than 5% in Brazil, while 5 out of 10 in Argentina and 6 out of 10 in Colombia foresee a stable situation.

• In Asia/Pacific, the contrast is even wider. Out of the five markets detailed in the report, there are two where a majority of respondents foresee an increase of activity of more than 5%: India and Malaysia (for respectively 7 and 6 companies out of 10); one with a stable status forecast (Australia, 4 participants out of 10) and two where the majority of respondents plan a decrease of more than 5%: China (55%) and Thailand (40%).

Revenues

Global results indicate that most companies foresee:

• An increase of more than 5% of their revenues in 2025 compared to 2024 for “Renting space” (36% of respondents) and “Selling services” (39%).

• A stable evolution (of +/- 5%) for “Selling sponsoring opportunities” (32% of respondents, while 27% of respondents mention that this revenue stream is not relevant for their company).

• 54% of respondents do not consider “receiving subsidies” relevant to their company. When it is, most anticipate a stable evolution (+/- 5%) of this revenue stream.

Similarly to the previous question related to country revenue forecast, country results to this question indicate significant differences. Countries where most companies anticipate an increase of more than 5% of their 2025 revenues compared to 2024 are: Saudi Arabia (80%), the UAE (67%), India (62%), Mexico (61%), Argentina (58%) and Colombia (55%) for “Renting space”; Saudi Arabia (70%), the UAE (67%), India (62%), Malaysia (60%), Argentina (58%), Brazil (57%) and Colombia (54%) for “Selling services”.

The results by type of activity highlight different forecasts by revenue stream:

• For “Renting space”, most organisers (49%) anticipate an increase of more than 5% while most venues or “venues and organisers” anticipate a stable trend (51% for both).

• For “Selling services”, most service providers/suppliers (42%) anticipate an increase of more than 5% while most organisers, venues or “venues and organisers” anticipate a stable trend (42%, 44%, 38% respectively).

• For “Selling sponsoring opportunities”, most organisers and “organisers and venues” anticipate a stable trend (respectively 39% and 48%), while this revenue channel is “not relevant” for most venues and service providers/suppliers (respectively 55% and 73% of respondents).

Operating profit

For 2024, 40% of the companies report an annual increase of more than 10%, and 51% declare a stable result (between -10% and +10%). For 2025, 30% of the companies report an annual increase of more than 10%, and 53% report a stable profit.

Country results show significant differences, and the 5 top markets with the highest proportions of respondents reporting an increase in their operating profit by more than 10% are: Mexico (63%), Germany (61%), the UK (53%), the UAE and India (both 50%) for 2024; and India (64%), the UAE (58%), Brazil (43%), Colombia (42%), and Malaysia (40%) for 2025.

Results by type of activity do not show significant differences, and a majority of respondents from all segments anticipate stable profits (between -10% and +10%) for both 2024 and 2025: 50% of organisers, 48% of “venues & organisers”, 53% of venues and 53% of service providers/suppliers for 2024; 53% of organisers, 56% of “venues & organisers”, 63% of venues and 47% of service providers/suppliers for 2025.

Workforce development

Globally, 40% of companies declare that they plan to increase their staff numbers, while another 56% declare that they will keep current staff numbers stable. The highest proportion of companies planning to add staff is identified in Saudi Arabia (80%), Malaysia (70%), Spain (62%), the UAE (58%), and India (57%).

At segment level, on average, organisers and service providers/suppliers are more likely to recruit than venues: 43% of both organisers and service providers/suppliers plan to add additional staff, while 54% of organisers and 48% of service providers/suppliers will keep current staff numbers stable; 17% of venues plan to add additional staff and 83% to keep current staff numbers stable.

Most important business issues

For the short term:

• The most pressing business issue remains “State of the economy in home market” (19% of answers globally, against 23% six months ago), and it is the main issue in all regions, except the Middle East and Africa, where it ranks second.

• “Geopolitical challenges” (16% of answers, same as six months ago, and the top issue with 18% of answers for the Middle East and Africa) and “Global economic developments” (15%, same as six months ago) come in as the second and third most important issues globally.

• “Internal management challenges” (13%), “Competition from within the exhibition industry” (10%), followed by “Impact of digitalisation”, “Regulatory / Stakeholders issues” (respectively 9% and 7%, both +2% compared to 6 months ago), “Competition with other media” and “Sustainability / Climate” (both 6%) follow.

The analysis of the top 5 global issues by industry segment shows no differences for the top 2 issues, but the order of the other 3 varies.

There are many differences in ranking when comparing the most important issues in the short term versus mid-term:

• The top three issues remain the same, but the first and third have swapped places: “Global economic developments” now is the top mid-term issue with 19% of answers (compared to the short-term issues, where it ranks third with 15%), followed by “Geopolitical challenges” with 15% of answers (compared to 16% for the short term) and “State of the economy in the home market” is third with 12% of answers (compared to the short-term issues, where it ranks first with 19%).

• “Sustainability / Climate” comes to the fourth position for the mid-term (with almost the same level of 12% as the third one), compared to the nineth position on the short term (with only 6% of answers).

• “Competition from within the exhibition industry” (12% of answers), “Impact of digitalisation”, “Competition with other media” and “Internal management challenges” follow (all with 8%), and then “Regulatory stakeholders’ issues” (7%).

The analysis of the top 5 global issues by industry segment (organiser, venue and service provider/supplier) shows differences: Organisers and venues share the same top 2 issues: “Global economic developments” (20% of answers for organisers and 22% for venues) and “Geopolitical challenges” (16% of answers for organisers and 15% for venues); but “Sustainability/Climate” is the top priority for “Service providers/suppliers” (15% of answers), followed by “Geopolitical challenges” (13% of answers).

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Continue reading: https://www.ufi.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/UFI_Media_Release_35th_Barometer.pdf

35th UFI Global Exhibition Barometer: https://www.ufi.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/UFI-Barometer-35th-Edition.pdf

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