Resumo: The Tourism Destination is a concept still under construction. The most recent academic contributions are in favor of a flexible and dynamic perspective of it. Many factors could influence such a perspective, but there is one very important one: re-visitation. This factor, through the experience effect, alters the perception and use of tourist attractions. The Network Destination approach, which implies a definition of the destination based on the interrelationships between tourist attractions and demand, their current and future situation, and/or the inclusion of new attractions in the future, is an appropriate approach for the study of re-visits. Similarly, the differentiation between iconic and semi-biotic attractions in a destination helps to profile demand behavior on a first visit or on revisits. This paper uses both perspectives to study the interrelationships between the concepts of Destination and Re-visit. The central objective is to determine the dynamic character of the same destination as a function of the re-visit variable, either yes or no (first visit or re-visit), or the number of the re-visit (first re-visit or later). The results suggest that there are interesting changes in the tourist attractions considered by demand in each case. That the first attractions visited are the iconic ones, followed by the semiotic ones. That the definition of the destination is progressively altered by the effect of successive revisits, generating a certain type of polydestination according to the type of visitors. Moreover, that a certain dynamic behavior of the Tourist Destination is originated.