China Daily Global Weekly

Holiday travel takes off again

Tourism sector gets strong bounce as trip bookings for Spring Festival surge, for longer stays and journeys

- By CHENG SI chengsi@chinadaily.com.cn

Travel agency LY.com was also seeing strong customer interest online. On its platform, consultanc­y requests for longdistan­ce travel during the holiday surged 20-fold in the week to Jan 9. Consultanc­y requests for travel visas rose eightfold over the same period.

China’s tourism market is expecting a strong rebound during the Spring Festival holiday, with travelers eager to take long-distance trips and spend more money after the nation optimized its COVID-19 control measures.

Travel agency bookings and data show travelers are also ready for longer stays during the seven-day break that will start on Jan 21, with journeys to other regions and overseas.

During Spring Festival holidays in the past two years, travelers preferred short-distance trips to destinatio­ns near their homes or workplaces due to virus control measures and health concerns.

Travel portal Tuniu said 72 percent of its bookings for the now imminent holiday period were for cross-regional trips. Destinatio­ns with a coastal location or mild climate, such as Hainan province in the south and Yunnan province in the southwest, were high on travelers’ lists.

Longer holiday stays were also favored, with around 31 percent of its online customers booking six-day trips, and 28 percent choosing fourday stays.

Travel agency LY.com was also seeing strong customer interest online. On its platform, consultanc­y requests for long-distance travel during the holiday surged 20-fold in the week to Jan 9. Consultanc­y requests for travel visas rose eightfold over the same period.

Winter locations with snow views and ice sports, such as Changbai Mountain in Northeast China’s Jilin province, were also attracting a lot of interest.

According to a report by LY.com, bookings and interest in ice rinks and ski resorts were increasing.

Beijing’s Shichahai ice rink, for example, saw searches for the venue as a Spring Festival holiday destinatio­n on the agency’s platform increase by 76 percent compared with the same period last year.

Ding Fan, in charge of travel portal Fliggy’s Spring Festival holiday team, said the tourism market will see growth in the number of travelers and the amount they spend.

Meanwhile, the strong travel demand was driving a rise in the prices of air tickets and hotels.

Travel portal Trip.com Group said the price of a one-way flight to the popular beach destinatio­n of Sanya, Hainan, for the holiday period had surged 47 percent year-on-year to over 1,900 yuan ($280). A one-way air ticket to Dali, in Southwest China’s

Yunnan province, had jumped 65 percent to just over 1,500 yuan.

The group said that hotel rooms it offers on its online platform for Sanya and Yunnan’s Xishuangba­nna — a destinatio­n famous for its tropical landscape and exotic ethnic Dai culture — are all booked for the holiday.

Outbound tourism during Spring Festival was also expected to surge after the easing of the country’s COVID-19 policies.

Trip.com Group said bookings for overseas travel have surged by 540 percent from the previous Spring Festival holiday, while the average cost of overseas bookings has risen 32 percent.

Overseas destinatio­ns favored by travelers include Australia, Thailand and Malaysia.

Bookings for Melbourne, Australia, for example, have increased 50-fold from last year, while bookings for Bangkok, Thailand, rose tenfold.

Fliggy, the travel portal, said it had seen a spike in bookings for overseas trips on its platform. Bookings for internatio­nal air tickets have tripled from last year, with reservatio­ns for the most popular destinatio­n, Thailand, increasing 200-fold.

Shen Jiani, a researcher at Trip. com Group, said that with the relaxation of travel policies, Chinese tourists are more confident about making overseas trips. “Chinese travelers will help energize the world’s tourism,” she said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States