What does being rich mean for you? Money? Freedom? Becoming the next Warren Buffett? Or simply not setting an alarm ever again? 💰 Today, wealth is something we measure in numbers, posh lifestyles, constant Instagram pictures, and things we can easily show off. Let’s be honest, this is modern reality. And Hallstatt's overtourism is a perfect example of what happens when modern ideas of wealth and visibility collide with a place that was never meant for global fame.
Back in the day, being rich was far more practical. Think about it like this. The Middle Ages. No fridges. No freezers. No supermarkets. People had one main concern: how to preserve food. Meat, fish, dairy, herbs etc. Through summer and often unpredictable seasons. And guess what? There was only one real way of doing it.
Salt. 🧂
Yes, exactly, salt wasn’t just seasoning. It was life insurance. In other words, it was the only substance that could preserve food in the long run. And in medieval Europe, that made salt one of the most valuable resources of all. Governments traded, taxed, and controlled salt. In medieval Italy and France, salt taxes were imposed by rulers. Across Central Europe, salt trade was regulated by local governments. Salt was heavy, difficult to transport, and yet absolutely worth it, because it extended the life of food and, by extension, the life of people.
One of the richest regions in Europe because of this was Hallstatt.
Today, it’s a tiny village in the middle of nowhere in Austria. But Hallstatt sits in Austria’s Salzkammergut region — a name that literally means “estate of the salt chamber.” This place didn’t become wealthy by accident. It became wealthy because it had what everyone else needed.
But why am I telling you all this? 🤔
Because this ancient idea of wealth still makes sense in one small village — even if most people know it only from Instagram.
Out of sight, out of mind
Up until the 19th century, Hallstatt was only reachable on foot or by boat. No roads, buses and no easy access. Just a small village pressed between a lake and the mountains. Things changed once transport improved. Slowly at first. Then very fast.
From UNESCO Heritage to Pop Culture
In 1997, Hallstatt was named a UNESCO World Heritage Site due to its salt cultural importance. Before 1997, Hallstatt received around 100 visitors a day. Mostly locals and people who already knew the region visited.
In the early 2000s, Hallstatt started appearing in East Asian travel media, especially in Japan and South Korea, as the “perfect European village”. Asian tourists started traveling to Hallstatt specifically because they had seen it on screen.
The turning point was 2006, when the South Korean TV drama Spring Waltz was filmed in Hallstatt. That show was extremely popular across Asia, including China. After the series aired, Hallstatt became associated with romance, purity, and an idealized “European dream”.
In 2012, a full-scale replica of Hallstatt was built in Luoyang, Guangdong Province, China. Life-sized. Carefully copied. It cost around one billion US dollars. The idea was simple: let people experience “Europe” without traveling to Europe. Ironically, it did the opposite. Fewer than 50 Chinese tourists visited Hallstatt in 2005. After the replica, thousands began flying to Austria every year to see the original.
And just in case that wasn’t enough, rumors spread in 2013 that Hallstatt inspired Arendelle (fictional kingdom) in Disney’s Frozen. Whether that’s fully true or not almost doesn’t matter anymore. The PR and marketing did its job perfectly.
No more tourists, please!
Once Hallstatt became famous on the other side of the world, it started attracting visitors from everywhere. And of course, tourism brings money. That part is undeniable. But like every blessing, it comes with a cost.
According to different sources, Hallstatt now welcomes around one million visitors per year. On the busiest days, that can mean up to 10,000 people walking through a village of fewer than 800 residents!!! This is what Hallstatt overtourism looks like in real life.
This is when things started to change. Prices went up. Drones became a daily nuisance. Trash became a real problem. Locals began saying it felt less like a village and more like a theme park, one designed for short stops and quick photos rather than everyday life.
At one point, the mayor even explored cutting the number of tourist buses, around 20,000 a year. Legally, it’s complicated. You can’t exactly close the gates on a village that people still call home. These attempts to manage Hallstatt overtourism have not solved it.
In 2023, the BBC and CNN openly reported on Hallstatt being overwhelmed by tourism. To top it all, the town built wooden fences to block selfie spots!
Walk around the village today and you’ll notice signs asking tourists to move on, to respect the space, keep voices down and to remember that real people live here.
But let's be real. Tourists will come and go. Hallstatt overtourism may fade one day. Trends will change. Instagram will move on. But chasing the perfect picture, one that will eventually fade under the next trend, feels a bit overrated.
Nevertheless, no good steak ever tasted right without salt. And salt, at least, never needed a commercial to stay relevant. 🥩😉