Chinese domestic air travel slides over Lunar New Year period but bookings for May holiday look promising

CHINA. Research undertaken by travel analytics company ForwardKeys reveals that domestic air travel in China during the Lunar New Year period (11-17 February) was -69.3% down on the equivalent period in 2019. Domestic travel during the fortnight before, which is traditionally a busy period for Chinese people returning home to spend the holiday with their families, was -62.3% down.

The travel picture in the Chinese domestic market for the period just before, and during, the Lunar New Year Golden Week holiday

The picture varied by destination. Sanya, serving the holiday resort island and offshore duty free shopping market of Hainan, was more resilient than many locations. It received 66% as many visitors as in 2019.

Zhengzhou, the capital of Henan province, was the second most resilient destination, receiving 41% as many travellers as it did two years ago. Shenzhen, another shopping hotspot and the city which links Hong Kong to Mainland China, was in third place.

Travel to Haikou, in the capital of Hainan, also proved relatively resilient, as it attracted 40% as many visitors as in 2019. Chengdu and Chongqing, two major cities in Southwest China, famous for their natural scenery and cuisine, occupied fifth and sixth places in the resilience rankings, achieving 39% and 36% of 2019 visitor numbers, respectively.

By contrast, domestic travel to China’s two most important cities, Beijing and Shanghai, suffered badly, owing to mini COVID-19 outbreaks and associated travel restrictions. Northern destinations, popular for winter sports, also fared badly, owing to a resurgence of COVID-19 this Winter.

Travel bookings to Sanya surged once authorities announced an easing of travel restrictions on 1 February

While the drop in travel was extremely severe, said ForwardKeys, it was not as bad as had been expected just eight days before the holiday, when bookings for Golden Week travel were -85.3% behind where they were at the equivalent point in 2019.

A sudden surge in last-minute bookings was prompted by announcements from several local authorities that travel restrictions were being eased, including to Hainan. On 1 February it was announced that travellers from low-risk areas did not need to take a PCR test before visiting the island, at which point issued tickets surged and even overtook 2019 levels from 4 February.

Sanya and Haikou were among the most resilient destination in the period, underscoring the attraction of Hainan Island to Chinese visitors

ForwardKeys VP Insights Olivier Ponti commented: “From a travel perspective, this Chinese New Year has been dreadful. Excluding Sanya, no major destination in China managed to get close to half the number of domestic visitors it received in 2019; and only four major destinations managed to reach two-fifths. However, the situation could have been much worse had it not been for a surge in last minute bookings, owing to a loosening of travel restrictions.”

He added: “The Chinese domestic aviation market has been incredibly volatile; and that volatility has been driven in one direction by a powerful pent-up demand to travel and in the other by resurgences of COVID-19 and the imposition of travel restrictions. At the beginning of September, with COVID-19 seemingly eradicated from China, domestic aviation returned to pre-pandemic levels; however, the recent modest outbreaks have hit Chinese New Year travel.

“But as China cleared all high and medium-risk areas on 22 February, which means the latest COVID-19 outbreak has been contained, we believe that considerable pent-up demand will be released in the Spring, especially during the Labour Day holiday in May. As of 19 February, flight tickets issued for the Labour Day holiday (1-5 May) were only -8% behind where they were at the equivalent moment in 2019.”

Click here for the February edition of The Moodie Davitt Magazine, featuring our Hainan Special Report, with an in-depth review of the booming offshore duty free channel and its prospects.

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