下载app

扫码下载

扫码关注

新华报业网  > 推荐 > 正文
Economic vitality reflected in holiday boom: China Daily editorial

This drone photo shows tourists visiting Huishan ancient town in Wuxi city, East China's Jiangsu province May 3, 2026. People across China stepped out to fully enjoy their leisure time during the ongoing May Day holiday. [Photo/Xinhua]

The May Day holiday is one of the busiest travel times of the year in China. During the five-day period from Friday to Tuesday, large numbers of Chinese travelers take the opportunity to visit family, explore domestic destinations or go abroad. The surge in travel this year not only provides a boost to the country's transportation, tourism and retail sectors, but also serves as an indicator of the vitality and potential of the Chinese consumer market.

During this period, many travel figures reached new heights, with the number of cross-regional trips at home expected to total 1.52 billion, an average of 304 million per day — a 4 percent increase over last year. International air travel bookings are expected to surpass 1.12 million, while daily border crossings are projected to reach a peak of 2.25 million. This travel frenzy reflects a marked rise in the overall demand that has been facilitated by improvements in China's infrastructure as well as its policy and business environment.

Tourist consumption patterns have changed, with travelers no longer merely sightseeing but engaging in immersive experiences. Customized interest tours, intangible cultural heritage workshops and immersive performances have seen strong demand, with orders for "interest-based custom tours" on some platforms increasing by nearly 80 percent year-on-year.

China boasts a diverse tapestry of attractions, from breathtaking natural landscapes to profound cultural heritage sites, all supported by modern infrastructure such as high-speed rail and 5G networks. This combination provides a robust foundation for continued consumption growth.

The evolving consumption habits of the younger generation are also reshaping market dynamics, as they are driving the shift toward cultural tourism and more tailored experiences, and opening new opportunities for related sectors, including dining, accommodation and transportation.

This rise in cultural tourism has led to new business models, such as nighttime cultural tourism. The cross-industry integration invigorates the consumer market and injects new vitality into the cultural tourism industry.

Government initiatives have also played their part in the tourism boom, with over 284 million yuan ($41.58 million) in tourism vouchers distributed. Moreover, financial institutions have introduced interest subsidies and zero-interest coupons, reducing consumer credit costs and driving cultural tourism and dining spending. These policy dividends have helped unleash consumption.

Meanwhile, China's optimized visa policies, immediate tax refunds for departing tourists and the convenience of mobile payments have markedly lowered travel barriers and enhanced service convenience for overseas tourists. The country has expanded its unilateral visa-free access to 50 countries and extended mutual visa-exemption agreements to 29 countries. Plus, travelers from 55 countries can take advantage of a 240-hour visa-free transit policy to visit China.

The expansion of visa-free policies has directly spurred a surge in inbound tourism. Visitors from countries such as Russia, the United Kingdom and Spain have increased significantly, with inbound tourism extending beyond traditional hot spots, indicating China's growing international appeal. Destinations such as Lhasa, Chengdu, and Taiyuan have seen marked growth in foreign visitors thanks to the appeal of their intangible cultural heritage and local customs.

According to the World Travel and Tourism Council, China's travel and tourism economy grew 9.9 percent last year — more than twice the global average. The growth was largely driven by a more than 10 percent increase in foreign tourist spending in China in 2025. "China could become the world's largest tourism economy by the end of the decade," WTTC President and CEO Gloria Guevara told the media.

While the five-hour radius is still the mainstay of outbound tourism, longer trips are trending, with Italy, the United States and Australia ranking among the top 10 destinations for Chinese tourists. Young travelers are increasingly taking "extended vacations" to embark on long journeys. This not only helps boost the holiday economy, but also helps shape China's international image.

The strong holiday consumption is not only a result of the organic integration of residents' consumption upgrading and high-quality economic development, it also resonates well with China's first-quarter economic data, reflecting the smooth circulation of the economy and the release of domestic demand potential.

China's tourism consumption boom during the May Day holiday is a vivid reflection of the country's pursuit of high-quality development. The world sees an increasingly open, prosperous and confident China. What China offers to the world is opportunity, growth and innovation.

责编:吴盈青
版权和免责声明

版权声明: 凡来源为"交汇点、新华日报及其子报"或电头为"新华报业网"的稿件,均为新华报业网独家版权所有,未经许可不得转载或镜像;授权转载必须注明来源为"新华报业网",并保留"新华报业网"的电头。

免责声明: 本站转载稿件仅代表作者个人观点,与新华报业网无关。其原创性以及文中陈述文字和内容未经本站证实,对本文以及其中全部或者部分内容、文字的真实性、完整性、及时性本站不作任何保证或者承诺,请读者仅作参考,并请自行核实相关内容。

专题
视频

扫码下载

交汇点新闻APP

Android版

iPhone版

分享到微信朋友圈
打开微信,点击底部的“发现”,使用 “扫一扫” 即可将网页分享到我的朋友圈。
分享到QQ
手机QQ扫描二维码,点击右上角 ··· 按钮分享到QQ好友或QQ空间