China Daily

Seasonal fun for old and young

- By YANG FEIYUE

The number of family travelers increases with the mercury as students enjoy a summer break every year.

Family packages account for over 40 percent of all bookings through China’s biggest online travel agency, Ctrip.

The second-child policy introduced in January 2016 has expanded the market, the agency says in a report issued earlier this month.

Orders from families traveling with two children increased 14 percent.

Families’ spending averages about 10,000 yuan ($1,470), 15 percent more than adult travelers’.

Shanghai, Beijing and Guangdong province’s capital, Guangzhou, produce the most family travelers, respective­ly. Hainan province’s Sanya, Fujian province’s Xiamen and Beijing are their favored domestic destinatio­ns.

Singapore, Thailand’s Phuket Island and Japan’s Osaka are the most popular outbound destinatio­ns among family travelers.

Parents tend to spend more to ensure their whole family can enjoy quality dining, accommodat­ion and fun experience­s, Ctrip says.

Families with children ages 5 to 6 prefer zoos, botanical gardens, ocean parks and interactiv­e do-it-yourself experience­s to satisfy kids’ curiosity, Beijing-based mobile data-service platform TalkingDat­a says.

Museums and historical sites are usually included in long-distance trips for older children because of their educationa­l value.

Children around 5 or 6 are taken on five to 10 trips annually — the most frequently of all comparable age ranges, TalkingDat­a reports.

Parents usually take children younger than 4 on short sightseein­g trips to expose them to nature.

Customized tours have grown increasing­ly popular. The number of Ctrip’s tailored trips for families has tripled over the past year.

“Customized tours can satisfy the very complex and specific needs of parents and children travelers,” says Shi Yuzhuan, chief marketing officer with Ctrip’s tourism division.

The most common benefits are that such tours can help customers convenient­ly find such things they may suddenly need as baby bottles or pediatric medicines, Shi says.

“Customized tours are private and offer better service,” Shi says.

“That makes them better for family travelers.”

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A family poses for a picture on a section of the Great Wall in Beijing.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A family poses for a picture on a section of the Great Wall in Beijing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong