The Trump Administration’s efforts to ban travelers from seven Middle Eastern countries has slowed bookings and deterred international travelers heading to the U.S., but Colorado is not feeling much impact.

Forward Keys, which tracks U.S. air travel trends, found bookings from Iraq, Iran, Syria, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen plummeted as the new administration worked to ban travelers arriving from those countries. The travel ban has slowed U.S.-bound traffic from other parts of the world as well. Forward Keys showed net bookings from around the world have fallen 6.5 percent since President Donald Trump announced the immigration ban in late January, when compared to the similar period in 2016.

The Global Business Travel Association said uncertainty around travel to the U.S. caused a $185 million loss in international travel bookings in the first week of February across the U.S. If the so-called “Trump Slump” continues, the country’s travel industry could see billion-dollar declines.

But those declines in visitors and revenue won’t likely hit Colorado hard, said Andrea Blankenship, the Colorado Tourism Office’s director of international tourism.

Colorado does not host many travelers from the Middle East. Of the seven countries listed in the Trump Administration’s ban, Iran was the largest source of Colorado tourists in 2015 with 568 visitors. The entire Middle East accounts for about 5,300 annual visitors to Colorado. Colorado’s international tourism efforts are focused in six countries: Great Britain, Germany, France, Canada, Japan and China.

The largest concerns for travelers from those countries, Blankenship said, involves the visa waiver program that allows visitors from 38 countries to travel to the U.S. without a visa. There has been no discussion of changing the visa waiver program. (Although Trump’s Jan. 27 executive order — entitled “Protecting the nation from foreign terrorist entry into the United States” — suspends the Visa Interview Waiver Program, which allows some repeat visa applicants to skip an in-person interview.)

“Actually, the bigger effect right now is the strength of the U.S. dollar,” Blankenship said.

Blankenship said Colorado is fortunate because most international travelers consider the state “an aspirational destination.”

“People who have saved up years to come here are still going to come. Politics is playing no role in that,” she said.