Masoud Soltanifar said on state TV that the thriving industry could help boost Iran's economy out of recession and bring in much-needed hard currency. He said 4.5 million foreign tourists that came to the Islamic Republic over the period, bringing in some USD 6 billion in revenue.
He attributed the increase to the 2013 election of President Hassan Rouhani, who has shifted away from the bombastic style adopted under his hard-line predecessor, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Rouhani, who has advocated for tourism, hopes it will boost the country's image.
Looser visa policies have also helped. The government has instructed its embassies around the world to issue visas, especially for group tours, within less than a week, while in the past applications took over a month.
Tourism from Europe has grown 200 percent, he said, thanks to fewer restrictions at embassies, especially in Germany. Iran has 17 UNESCO-registered world heritage sites, and plans to host 20 million tourists a year by 2025, Soltanifar said, a sum that would fetch USD 30 billion annually.
"The government is ready to provide low-cost loan facilities out of the National Development Fund to investors," Soltanifar said. "There is a strong government will to help promote tourism and good coordination is being developed among all sectors to make that happen," he said.
Ebrahim Pourfaraj, a leading tour organizer, said all four- and five-star hotels at Iran's three major tourist-destination cities of Isfahan, Shiraz and Yazd have been sold out for 2014 and are now being booked for 2015.
That makes top Iranian hotels cheaper compared to those in other countries, with a room at a four-star hotel in Yazd for example costing about USD 100 a night.
