BEIJING: China’s hard-hit tourism sector is poised for a gradual recovery and the upcoming Labour Day holidays is expected to see a record number of over 80 million tourists as people try to return to normality after the recent Covid-19 lockdowns.
The five-day holiday starting on May 1 will be the first “mini peak season” this year, according to a report by Trip.com Group, China’s largest online travel services provider. It expects double the number of travellers seen during the Ching Ming Festival earlier this month, which recorded 43 million tourists and 8 billion yuan in tourism revenue, according to the China Tourism Academy.
Domestic travel, in particular intra-provincial and local trips, will be the preferred choice for most holidaymakers as restrictions are still in place for travel across provinces or to overseas destinations.
Shanghai, Guangzhou and Beijing are the top three destinations for holidaymakers during the planned Labour Day break, according to the report by the Nasdaq-listed Trip.com, formerly known as Ctrip.com International.
Hotel bookings are emerging with “several hundred million yuan” in gross merchandise value, and 55% of bookings have been made with four- and five-star hotels as higher quality trips are in demand amid safety concerns, according to Trip.com.
A total of 4,000 attraction sites will be open for tourists during the May break, a record number since the pandemic, with Taiping National Forest Park in central China’s Xi’an city and the Mutianyu section of the Great Wall in Beijing among the most popular destinations based on the bookings on Trip.com.
Meanwhile, China’s airlines are poised for a bout of “revenge travelling” in coming weeks, as soaring reservations ahead of the annual Labour Day holiday helped them recover 40% of their traffic.
Regional carriers like Guizhou Airlines, Fuzhou Airlines, and China Eastern Airlines’ low-cost unit China United Airlines have added new routes around the country, according to an earlier report by CAAC News, a newspaper run by the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC). United has added 25 routes, eight of which depart from the new Daxing airport in the Chinese capital.
As China continues to bring the Covid-19 situation under control, local governments have also introduced support policies and cash coupons to encourage consumers to shop and travel more as an attempt to restart the economy.