Visitors flock to Martin County's walkable downtown for waterfront dining and old Florida vibes, boosting local tourism on the Treasure Coast.
Stuart, Martin County's historic riverfront downtown, has drawn renewed attention as a travel destination, with visitors citing its walkable historic district, waterfront dining and old Florida character as draws increasingly rare along the state's coastline.
The specific economic impact of tourism on Stuart and Martin County — including visitor spending figures, hotel occupancy rates or year-over-year tourism revenue — was not confirmed in available source material. Martin County's tourism development council tracks those figures through bed-tax collections, which are public record.
Stuart's downtown corridor along Flagler Avenue and the St. Lucie River waterfront has long anchored the city's identity as a working fishing town turned arts and dining destination. The historic district includes the Lyric Theatre, a restored 1926 landmark, and a concentration of locally owned restaurants and boutique retailers that distinguish it from larger commercial corridors to the south.
For Treasure Coast residents considering business investment, the tourism signal matters: foot traffic from out-of-county visitors supports retail and hospitality employment, and sustained visitor interest can influence commercial real estate demand and lease rates in the downtown core.
Martin County's tourism and marketing figures, including the most recent bed-tax revenue reports, are available through the Martin County Board of County Commissioners as public record.
This article was generated with AI assistance using publicly available information. It was reviewed and approved by a human editor before publication. TC Sentinel uses AI writing tools in accordance with FTC guidelines.
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