Queenstown Lakes Mayor Jim Boult said the money would benefit the whole of Queenstown.
"It is one of those businesses that is Queenstown and if somebody out of town was conjuring up a vision of Queenstown, AJ Hackett Bungy would certainly be there alongside other businesses.
"People don't come to Queenstown just to bungy, [but] they might be influenced by that to visit."
He said restaurants, bars, hotels and other operators all gained from bungy surviving.
Mr Boult said he feared some bigger firms would only survive as "walking wounded", so it was "sensible" for the Government to support them to be "strong when the crisis is over".
Van Asch echoed the mayor on the wider effect.
"One of the problems is people get here and all the experiences Queenstown is famous for aren't working or you have to come back [at a specific time], then there's a problem with that, where people go 'Oh, Queenstown doesn't really work any more'."
Had the company not received money from the $400m Strategic Tourism Assets Protection Programme, it would have hibernated several experiences and let go of or redeployed 90 staff, van Asch said.
As with many other tourism businesses around Otago, the company relied on international tourists and has needed to cut its near $10m annual wage bill.
For the past month it had offered $88 bungy jumps and van Asch said although prices would increase, they would remain Kiwi friendly.
He said 20 essential staff, including jump masters who train for two to three years, could now be retained when the wage subsidy expired.
Without these staff, operations would be slow to get going when the border reopened because of the training and safety requirements involved with running the adrenaline-inducing activities.
The company had been in talks with the Queenstown Lakes District Council, the Department of Conservation and the Otago Regional Council about redeploying tourism staff to conservation roles.
The bail-out announced yesterday consisted of a $5.1m grant for the first year and an optional loan of the same amount next year.
"The ideal outcome is the business is working well and we don't need that loan, but I don't know, my crystal ball hasn't been working very well of late."
AJ Hackett Bungy has received the largest individual payout to date from the tourism fund, $1.5m went to Whale Watch Kaikoura, $4m to Discover Waitomo and $20.2m for regional tourism offices.
Destination Queenstown chairman Richard Thomas said he welcomed the Government support and looked forward to hearing about more funds being awarded to Queenstown businesses soon.
The regional tourism board had itself applied for $1m, which it would use for a domestic marketing campaign.
Boult said this would be more important than ever with the transtasman bubble looking further off than it did last week.
Tourism Minister Kelvin Davis said the Government was "protecting a world-famous tourism asset, as well as the flow-on benefits" it brought to the town.
- Otago Daily Times