AEP6 Study Results
The results are in! Measuring the economic and social impact of nonprofit arts and culture organizations and their audiences in 2022, the main takeaways from the study include the following topics and economic impacts:
Total arts industry spending:
- Organizations: $153,072,316
- Audiences: $234,390,974
- Total: $387,463,290
Total economic impact of spending by arts and culture organizations and their audiences:
- Employment (Jobs): 6,764
- Personal Income Paid to Residents: $260,142,550
- Local Tax Revenue (city and county): $11,242,603
- State Tax Revenue: $11,752,276
- Federal Tax Revenue: $53,088,941
Event-related spending by arts and culture audiences:
- Local attendees: $136,381,310
- Nonlocal attendees: $98,009,664
- All attendees: $234,390,974
Nonprofit arts and culture audiences spend an average of $53.68 per person, per event.
View local Hillsborough County summary results and full report and national survey results.
Making Arts Count
Patrons of nonprofit arts and cultural events helped measure the economic impact of the arts community in Hillsborough County for the sixth nationwide Arts & Economic Prosperity study. The study, is conducted by Americans for the Arts approximately every five years to gauge the economic impact (on employment, government revenue, and household income) of spending by nonprofit arts and culture organizations and the event-related spending by their audiences.
During the 2022-2023 study, Hillsborough County and Americans for the Arts had a specific emphasis to include participants representing BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, People of Color) and ALAANA (African, Latinx, Asian, Arab, Native American) identifying communities—a segment of the nonprofit arts and culture sector that has been underrepresented in past studies.
- See the results from the Arts & Economic Prosperity 5 study for Hillsborough County, City of Tampa, and the Hillsborough and Pinellas region.
The study was conducted in two major parts, audience-intercept surveys and reporting from eligible nonprofit arts and cultural organizations.
Background Information
Audience-Intercept Survey (May 2022-May 2023)
From May 2022-May 2023, audiences across Hillsborough County were asked to complete a brief and completely anonymous 13 question survey at a wide variety of nonprofit arts and cultural performances, events, exhibits, experiences, and facilities. Most of the participating cultural organizations provided randomly selected patrons with QR codes or urls to take the survey on-site in English or Spanish before, during, or after a performance or event. Some venues used volunteers or staff to facilitate surveys using paper or tablets.
Attendees are highly encouraged to participate when asked to complete a survey. The collected information is critical to the local and national study effort and will help provide valuable information on the economic impact of the arts for our community.
Eligible non-profit arts and cultural organizations that can participate in collecting the audience surveys included:
- Traditional nonprofit arts and culture organizations, programs, events, venues, and facilities (e.g., performing arts, visual arts, museums, etc.)
- Municipally owned/operated institutions, programs, venues, and facilities (e.g., a city-operated museum or gallery)
- Unincorporated community arts and culture organizations and programs (i.e., without a formal legal status)
- Fiscally sponsored arts and culture organizations, programs, events, venues, and facilities
- Arts and cultural programs embedded in non-arts organizations (e.g., faith-based organizations, community/senior centers, health facilities, libraries, etc.)
- Living collections such as botanical gardens, zoos, and aquariums
- Historical and heritage societies (and other historical/heritage organizations or sites)
- Private arts councils
- Municipal arts agencies (e.g., an arts commission or a department of cultural affairs)
Traditionally, for-profit/commercial businesses and individual artists are excluded.
Nonprofit Arts and Cultural Organization Reports (January-March 2023)
Hillsborough County and Americans for the Arts deployed an organization survey to eligible nonprofit arts and culture organizations, programs, and facilities that are located within Hillsborough County. The survey collected information about each organization's revenues, expenditures, physical (in-person) attendance, virtual attendance, staff size, and volunteers. The survey also included a set of diversity and inclusion questions designed to identify organizations that primarily serve a community of color and organizations that have a chief executive who identifies as a person of color.
Arts and the Economy
According to Americans for the Arts, the arts are economic catalysts—strengthening the economy by creating jobs, generating government revenue, and driving tourism.
- Nonprofit arts and culture organizations are businesses. They employ people locally, purchase goods and services from within the community, are members of their Chambers of Commerce, and attract tourists to their regions.
- The arts drive commerce to local businesses. The arts, unlike most industries, leverage significant amounts of event-related spending by their audiences. In 2017, arts attendees spent $31.47 per person, per event, beyond the cost of admission on items such as meals, parking, and lodging—vital income for local businesses.
- Arts travelers are ideal tourists. They stay longer and spend more to seek out authentic cultural experiences. One-third of attendees travel from outside the county in which the activity takes place and spend an average of $48 per person. (69% say they traveled specifically to attend the activity.)
- Small investments. Big returns. In 2017, the combined $5 billion in direct arts funding by local, state, and federal governments yielded $27.5 billion in government revenue
More Information
For questions about the Arts & Economic Prosperity study, audience surveys, or participating as a nonprofit arts and cultural organization, contact the Arts Council at Arts@HCFLGov.net or (813) 571-6995.