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Destinations March 28, 2026 · 8 min read

The Rise of Second-Tier Cities as MICE Powerhouses in 2026

Nearly half of event planners are now exploring second-tier destinations for business events. From Jaipur to Nashville, Kigali to Baku, emerging cities are capturing MICE market share with new convention centers, competitive pricing, and unique destination storytelling.

For decades, the global MICE calendar has revolved around a handful of established hubs—London, Singapore, Las Vegas, Dubai, Barcelona. These cities built world-class convention infrastructure early, locked in airline connectivity, and became the default answer to "where should we hold the conference?"

But in 2026, a significant shift is underway. According to Micebook, nearly half of event planners are now exploring second-tier destinations to stretch budgets, access unique venues, and deliver more memorable attendee experiences. The result is a geographic redistribution of business events that is reshaping the global MICE map.

This article examines which cities are rising, what’s driving the shift, and what it means for event planners evaluating their next destination.

Why Second-Tier Cities Are Winning

The Cost Equation

The math is straightforward. Traditional MICE capitals have become expensive. Hotel rates during peak convention seasons in cities like London, New York, and Singapore routinely exceed $300–$500 per night. Convention center rental fees have risen alongside demand. Second-tier cities offer 30–50% lower costs on venues, accommodation, and catering while delivering modern infrastructure that meets international standards.

For a 500-person conference running three days, the savings can reach six figures—money that can be redirected to better content, technology, or attendee experiences.

Infrastructure Has Caught Up

The gap between first-tier and second-tier convention infrastructure has narrowed dramatically. Cities like Kigali, Jaipur, Nashville, and Baku have invested billions in purpose-built facilities that rival anything in traditional MICE capitals. India alone has seen its tier-II cities grow to represent 35–40% of domestic MICE activity, according to MICE and More, driven by new convention centers and improved connectivity.

Destination Storytelling

Second-tier cities offer something the established hubs often cannot: novelty. Attendees who have been to Singapore five times are energized by Baku. A sales incentive in Kigali creates a story that a trip to Orlando does not. Event planners increasingly recognize that destination itself is a content strategy—the right location creates buzz before a single session begins.

The Cities to Watch in 2026

Asia: India’s Tier-II Revolution

India’s MICE market is projected to reach $103.7 billion by 2030, growing at 13% CAGR from $49.4 billion in 2024, according to Government of India data cited by IMARC Group. The most striking trend is the geographic diversification away from Mumbai, Delhi, and Bangalore.

Key emerging Indian MICE cities:

India’s hotel sector is responding: 75% of hotel signings in 2024–25 were in non-metro areas, with 9,710 new rooms adding to a pipeline of 42,071 branded keys, per ICRA projections.

Japan is also diversifying, actively promoting Sapporo, Fukuoka, and Hiroshima as alternatives to Tokyo and Osaka for international MICE events, while Vietnam’s Da Nang is gaining traction as a beachside business events destination.

The Americas: Beyond Las Vegas and Orlando

In the United States, second-tier MICE cities are gaining ground with a combination of competitive pricing, state incentives, and significant infrastructure investment.

Nashville is a standout case. The Music City Center is pursuing a 587,000 sq ft expansion including 300,000 sq ft of new exhibit, ballroom, and meeting space, after an HVS feasibility study showed the city was losing significant business due to capacity constraints. Nashville’s entertainment ecosystem, dining scene, and cultural identity give it a destination story that traditional convention cities struggle to match.

Austin is in the middle of a complete convention center rebuild. The old facility has been demolished and construction is underway on a larger replacement, positioning the city for a major leap in MICE capacity by the late 2020s.

Other US cities gaining MICE attention include Houston, Atlanta, Seattle, and Denver, each offering lower costs than traditional Tier-1 destinations while providing strong airlift and hotel inventory.

In Latin America, cities like Medellín (Colombia) and regional Brazilian hubs beyond São Paulo are emerging as attractive options for both domestic and international business events, leveraging tourism infrastructure and competitive exchange rates.

Africa: Kigali and Beyond

Africa’s MICE market is growing at 17% CAGR—the fastest of any region globally. While South Africa (Cape Town, Johannesburg) remains the continent’s anchor, Rwanda’s capital Kigali has emerged as one of Africa’s most compelling MICE stories.

The Kigali Convention Centre offers state-of-the-art facilities for summits, product launches, and regional offsites. The city’s reputation for safety, cleanliness, and efficient logistics has made it a preferred location for international conferences. New air connectivity is expanding access: Oman Air launched a direct Muscat–Kigali route starting June 2026, specifically citing MICE demand as a driver.

Nairobi (Kenya) is another rising destination, positioning itself to rival traditional hubs by 2030 with expanding convention infrastructure and a strong base of NGO and development sector events.

Europe and Central Asia: The Outliers

While Europe dominates the global MICE market with 51.7% market share, the growth is increasingly happening outside the traditional capitals.

Lisbon has been named Europe’s Best MICE Destination for two consecutive years at the World MICE Awards—remarkable for a city that was not on most planners’ shortlists a decade ago. Its combination of competitive pricing (relative to London or Paris), excellent weather, walkable city center, and growing convention infrastructure has made it a magnet for international events.

Baku (Azerbaijan) is emerging as a MICE destination positioned to rival traditional cities by 2030, offering creative incentive experiences and modern venues at a fraction of Western European costs.

Regional European centers like Córdoba (Spain) and cities across Eastern Europe are also capturing specialized forums and niche conferences that don’t need the scale of a London or Frankfurt.

What’s Driving the Shift: Five Structural Forces

1. Budget Pressure Meets Infrastructure Parity

Corporate event budgets are growing, but so are expectations for ROI. According to FCM Travel, tier-II cities offer a "compelling value proposition" in 2026—modern facilities at lower cost, meaning planners can deliver higher-quality events within the same budget.

2. Airline Connectivity Is Expanding

Low-cost carriers and new route development are making second-tier cities more accessible than ever. Direct flights that didn’t exist five years ago now connect regional hubs across Asia, Africa, and the Americas, reducing travel friction for attendees.

3. Sustainability Narratives Favor Smaller Cities

Smaller events in smaller cities often have lower carbon footprints. For organizations with ESG commitments, choosing a second-tier destination that reduces delegate travel distances for regional audiences can be a genuine sustainability win—not just optics.

4. Government Incentives Are Aggressive

Convention bureaux in emerging MICE cities are offering incentives that established destinations cannot or will not match: subsidized venue costs, hosted buyer programs, marketing support, and even direct financial contributions to event organizers who bring international conferences to their city.

5. The Experience-First Shift

The broader MICE industry trend toward experience-first events, as covered by GMTC, aligns perfectly with second-tier destinations. These cities often deliver more authentic cultural experiences, unique venue options (heritage properties, outdoor spaces, local dining), and a sense of discovery that formula convention hotels cannot replicate.

What This Means for Event Planners

Practical Considerations

Choosing a second-tier MICE destination requires different due diligence than booking a familiar hub:

The Opportunity

For planners willing to do the homework, second-tier cities offer a strategic advantage: better value, unique experiences, and the ability to stand out in a landscape where attendees are increasingly selective about which events deserve their time.

The MICE industry’s geographic expansion is not a temporary trend—it’s a structural shift driven by infrastructure investment, connectivity improvements, and changing planner priorities. The cities investing now will be the established destinations of the 2030s.

Key Takeaways


Data sources: Micebook — Global MICE Trends Shaping 2026, MICE and More — India’s MICE Industry in 2026, AFECA — Emerging Trends in India MICE Industry 2025–2026, IMARC Group — India MICE Market, Nashville Music City Center — Expansion Plans, KUT Radio — Austin Convention Center Expansion, Travel and Tour World — Oman Air Kigali Route, Breaking Travel News — Lisbon Best MICE Destination, MICE and More — The MICE Migration: Top 10 Cities by 2030, FCM Travel — Tier II Cities MICE Value 2026, GMTC — Experience-First MICE Events 2026.

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Daniel Schaurich

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