The New Zealand Herald

Tourists warm to motel option

Chinese visitors boost growth

- Pattrick Smellie

Anew breed of more independen­t Chinese tourists is helping drive an explosion in the number of internatio­nal visitors staying in New Zealand motels. Traditiona­lly, motels have attracted far less of the internatio­nal tourist trade than other accommodat­ion options, with about two-thirds of motel guests being Kiwis, in part because the concept of holiday accommodat­ion with its own full kitchen is almost unknown outside Australia and New Zealand.

However, Statistics New Zealand’s November accommodat­ion survey results, published today, showed the sixth month in a row of 20 per centplus growth in internatio­nal guest nights in motels versus the same month a year earlier.

In November, some 378,000 of the total 1.6 million nights spent in New Zealand by internatio­nal visitors were spent in motels, an increase of 29 per cent on November 2015.

The total internatio­nal visitor number for the month was also another record, and up 5.1 per cent on the previous November, reflecting New Zealand’s ongoing internatio­nal tourism boom.

Tourism bodies put the trend to motel use down to two main factors: internatio­nal tourists “discoverin­g” the category and efforts to encourage travel to a wider range of regional destinatio­ns.

“If you’re successful in getting internatio­nal travellers exploring every part of the country, then you would expect to see motels doing well,” said Chris Roberts, head of Tourism Industry Aotearoa, an industry umbrella body.

“Outside the main centres, there are plenty of sizeable New Zealand towns that don’t have hotels”, the traditiona­l pied-a-terre for the visiting internatio­nal tourist.

Roberts said there was also a notable increase in the use of holiday parks by internatio­nal tourists, with many such parks now investing in more motel-style accommodat­ion as well as the traditiona­l campground cabins, campervan and tent sites.

“It seems to suggest that the internatio­nal traveller is discoverin­g the motel product, which is reasonably unique to New Zealand,” said Roberts.

Rachael Shadbolt, the general manager for communicat­ions at Hospitalit­y New Zealand, said there was also some evidence in the November figures suggesting some tourists may have changed their plans in November because of the Kaikoura earthquake’s disruption to driving around the South Island.

The official statistics showed an unsurprisi­ng collapse in the number of guest nights spent in Kaikoura, at 17,000 for the month, compared with 30,000 in November 2015, because of the November 14 quake, whose impact is expected to show again in December guest night figures.

However, the wider trend to more internatio­nal travellers, especially Asian people, staying in motels was a phenomenon that motel owners were starting to notice, said Shadbolt.

The growing number of independen­t Chinese tourists was a major change from “the coach tours of old, that filled hotels”.

“The Chinese market is maturing and there are a lot more free, independen­t travellers.” —

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