Nevada’s outdoor recreation is a $24 billion industry: Report

A report by the Nevada Division of outdoor Recreation (NDOR) and Radbridge values Nevada’s outdoor recreation industry at $24 billion, nearly four times higher than previous federal estimates. This figure includes activities across the state and even extends to the California side of Lake Tahoe.Outdoor recreation in Nevada encompasses hiking, skiing, hunting, camping, and other activities spread throughout both urban and rural areas. The industry supports over 58,000 jobs and contributes $8.1 billion to the state’s GDP, surpassing mining but still trailing behind gaming and tourism ($36.9 billion) and manufacturing ($11.2 billion).The report emphasizes outdoor recreation’s role in economic diversification, particularly benefiting rural counties, and highlights additional savings of over $2 billion yearly in healthcare costs due to increased physical activity. recent federal efforts to sell public lands for development were met with public opposition, underscoring the importance of preserving these outdoor spaces. NDOR hopes the report will raise awareness of the significant economic and community value of outdoor recreation in Nevada.


Nevada’s outdoor recreation is a $24 billion industry: Report

(The Center Square) – A report by the Nevada Division of Outdoor Recreation valued Nevada’s total outdoor recreation industry at nearly four times that of federal estimates.

The $24 billion valuation comes after recent federal efforts to sell large amounts of public lands for mining and housing development. 

The report conducted by NDOR and Radbridge, an economic analysis company focused on environmental projects, found Nevada’s outdoor recreation industry was directly and indirectly worth $24 billion. That figure also included the California side of Lake Tahoe.

NDOR also found the outdoor recreation industry in Nevada was spread across a number of more specific industries, activities, and geographies.

“The analysis shows that outdoor recreation is distributed across the state, in both urban and rural domains,” Radbridge Chief Operating Officer Johnny Mojica told The Center Square. “Hiking, skiing, rock climbing, hunting, camping, dark sky tourism; all throughout Nevada. Because these recreation opportunities exist statewide, that means that the opportunity for communities to engage in the outdoor recreation economy also exists statewide.”

Federal estimates found Nevada’s outdoor recreation supported over 58,000 jobs and contributed $8.1 billion to the state’s gross domestic product. While the figure comes nowhere close to the gaming and tourism industry ($36.9 billion) or manufacturing ($11.2 billion), it exceeds mining ($5.1 billion), which also contributed fewer than 15,000 jobs to the state.

NDOR did not respond to a request for comment by The Center Square, but called the report proof of the recreation industry’s value across the state.

“The analysis also highlights recreation’s unique role as a catalyst for economic diversification: Nearly 40% of the sector’s benefits are realized in our rural counties, promoting widespread prosperity,” NDOR Administrator Denise Beronio wrote in the report’s foreword.

Beyond more direct economic impacts, NDOR and Radbridge said outdoor recreation in Nevada saved the state over $2 billion in health care costs yearly, namely through increased activity.

Efforts earlier this year by the Trump administration to sell vast public lands were narrowly thwarted by public outrage. The federal Bureau of Land Management sold 6,800 acres of Nevada’s public land in April for oil and gas developments. Nevada has the highest portion of any state publicly owned at over 80%, according to the bureau.

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The NDOR report’s authors said they hope the research shows the value of an overlooked industry.

“It’s an economic development opportunity,” said Mojica. “The study helps people communicate the significance of this industry and proves that actions that promote or restrict outdoor recreation opportunities will have a measurable ripple effect in the local economy.”



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