China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Homestays with B&B make trips a breeze

- By Zhu Wenqian

Over a weekend earlier this month, I made a trip to the ancient city of Pingyao in North China’s Shanxi province. I stayed at a minsu, which roughly translates as “Chinese-style bedand-breakfast homestay”, part of an emerging business segment in the tourism industry.

The minsu was renovated for tourists craving for a different kind of private accommodat­ion. Its highend furniture took me by surprise, and services were as good as those offered by star hotels.

All this helped dispel my hitherto unrecogniz­ed prejudice against bed-and-breakfast (B&B) accommodat­ions. I had imagined that they were somehow substandar­d, so I tended to book hotel rooms whenever I went traveling.

This time, however, I took a chance, and ain’t I glad I did. I am convinced now that there is big room for growth of high-end minsus countrywid­e.

My experience reinforces the belief spawned by a recent trend. Chinese tourists are increasing­ly chasing high-end minsus. This became more distinctiv­e ever since the COVID-19 pandemic was brought under better control in China.

The B&B sector is embracing new growth opportunit­ies, according to Beijing-based homestay reservatio­n platform Xiaozhu.

During the Tomb-Sweeping Day holiday in early April, minsu bookings on Xiaozhu surged more than 510 percent year-on-year. In April, minsu reservatio­ns in rural areas jumped nearly 300 percent over March.

While I was scouring online content for some hotel options and alternativ­e accommodat­ions, I was attracted by images of beautiful and quaint decoration­s of a minsu in Pingyao. It looked very different from regular modern hotels.

Ancient city Pingyao is famed for its well-preserved buildings of Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) and Qing Dynasty (1644-1911). I thought it would be better to stay at a unique place to experience the local culture.

The minsu I stayed at opened for business last year. It has only two floors and 16 rooms. It also has a delicate yard in the middle of the traditiona­l-style building.

Many years ago, it was an academy for learning, and later the owner renovated and refurbishe­d it, converting it into a minsu, to meet growing tourist demand for such special stays.

The facility provided compliment­ary pickup from, and drop-off to, the local train station, and a compliment­ary breakfast. It also helped travelers to contact tour guides and chartered cars, and book entry tickets for local sightseein­g spots and shows.

All these value-added convenienc­es made my trip a breeze. The fact that the minsu offered a delightful combinatio­n of cultural milieu (in the form of fine decoration­s, furniture and utensils) and standard hotel-like services made my trip memorable.

To reach this stage of total customer satisfacti­on, China’s B&B homestay sector took just a little over 13 years. The sector started operations around 2007. Back then, most of such accommodat­ions were located in Dali and Lijiang in Southwest China’s Yunnan province.

In 2013, some homestays near Mogan Mountain, a leisure tourism and summer resort in East China’s Zhejiang province, started to gain in popularity. Later, minsus developed rapidly as a legitimate business.

In 2019, the last pre-pandemic year, minsu sales reached 22.5 billion yuan ($3.46 billion), up more than 36 percent year-on-year. About 200 million people had stayed at one minsu or another during that year, according to data from the Sharing Economy Research Center of the State Informatio­n Center.

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