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Foreigners Can Drive TukTuks in Sri Lanka - That's the Law
Sunday Island
|November 09, 2025
Sri Lanka faces a defining choice: remain trapped on the hamster wheel of mass tourism-short-stop itineraries, overcrowded attractions, and wealth funneled to mega-resorts - or rise as a sustainable, high-value destination rivaling Thailand, Vietnam, and Indonesia.
What blocks that transformation isn't economy, safety, policy, or politics, its deliberate disregard of the law and of the international human rights principles that underpin it. As a nation built on socialist values of equality and shared prosperity, Sri Lanka has a moral duty to ensure its tourism model uplifts communities rather than concentrates wealth.
The global experiential travel market built on authentic, independent exploration - was valued at USD 138 billion in 2024 and is projected to surge to USD 372.93 billion by 2034. For Sri Lanka, the humble tuktuk, an icon of its vibrant streets, is a bridge to unlocking a large share of this booming market. When travellers venture beyond short-stop itineraries and into rural towns, their spending has a multiplier effect. It doesn't end with hotels or tour operators; it flows directly to mechanics, roadside stalls, homestays, and family-run shops. The self-drive model turns tourists into mobile micro-investors, circulating income deep into communities that mass tourism overlooks. It is grassroots economics on three wheels.
The average tourist itinerary in Sri Lanka lasts just eight days (SLTDA), but self-drive travellers stay between 12 to 16 days and spend significantly more. On average, they contribute USD 1,281 per person, compared to USD 851 for a midrange visitor. The benefits of self-drive tuktuks extend deep into local communities. In Weligama, P.G. Nissanka earns over LKR 60,000 a month by leasing his tuktuk for self-drive rentals netting a return exceeding 25%, higher than many blue-chip firms on the Colombo Stock Exchange. Others, like Naveen, a 22-yearold flower seller from Wellimada, profit from this ripple effect-selling blooms to visiting travellers and colouring both their holidays and his own livelihood.
This story is from the November 09, 2025 edition of Sunday Island.
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