Shanghai Daily

No more stars makes travel convenient

- Hu Min

ONLINE searches for tourism products such as flights and hotels surged as much as 300 percent after the announceme­nt that the stars marking high-risk regions on the national travel history tracking code are being removed.

Shanghai-based online travel operator Trip.com said yesterday searches on its platform for tour packages to many popular destinatio­ns jumped more than 300 percent soon after the announceme­nt, underlinin­g strong demand for travel.

A summer tourism boom has already been seen as orders of inter-provincial tours for July 1-August 31 that Trip.com received between June 1 and Tuesday surged nearly 200 percent compared with the same period last month.

Bookings for luxury hotels jumped more than 50 percent for the same period, spurred by the resumption of dine-in services in Shanghai eateries.

Another major online travel operator, Tongcheng-eLong, said it saw a 180 percent rise in searches for flights within 30 minutes of the announceme­nt, compared with the same time the day before. Hotel searches soared 220 percent.

“The move is another boost for the badly-hit tourism market which is gradually getting back on track against the background of a number of preferenti­al policies and people’s strong demand to travel,” said Cheng Chaogong, a tourism analyst.

“And it will make tourists’ journeys more convenient and smoother and prevent a one-size-fits-all practice.”

Beijing-based Mafengwo, a travel service and social networking platform, said that it had witnessed a 225 percent surge in searches about Shanghai Disney Resort, and the announceme­nt of the reopening of the resort had also boosted the popularity of nearby hotels by 126 percent.

The popular Shanghai resort is scheduled to reopen today.

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