Theme

Visa-free travel, rising foreign visitors boost luxury hotel growth in China

· English· 南华早报
Visa-free travel, rising foreign visitors boost luxury hotel growth in China

ourists pose for photos at the Tiantan (Temple of Heaven) Park in Beijing.

Photo: Xinhua China’s luxury hotel sector has unlocked new avenues for business growth, fuelled by a boom in inbound tourism and a growing number of foreign business travellers and holidaymakers who favour high-end accommodation.

International tourists generally spend more than domestic ones, except for wealthy Chinese travellers.

Most visa-free visitors to China are from developed countries with much higher living costs.

Even spending at their usual levels, they would generate considerable revenue for Chinese businesses, according to Yong Chen, an associate professor at EHL Hospitality Business School in Switzerland.

The Hongkong and Shanghai Hotels, owner and operator of The Peninsula Hotels with operations in Beijing and Shanghai, has seen a significant increase in overseas guests supported by China’s visa-free policies.

At the Peninsula Shanghai, for example, cancellations by guests from Gulf states due to limited flight capacity had been offset by an increase in luxury travellers from other countries visiting China under the visa-free policies, the group said. “Shanghai has shown significant growth in international visitors, and Beijing is seeing a strong trend in diplomatic, business and returning leisure travellers,” said Benjamin Vuchot, CEO of The Hongkong and Shanghai Hotels.

At The Peninsula Beijing, the guest mix is now evenly split between domestic and international travellers.

The group said it was seeing a healthy combination of high-level business delegations and returning leisure visitors from the US, the United Kingdom, Australia and Mexico.

This trend has been bolstered by China’s continuous optimisation of visa policies.

The country has introduced unilateral visa-free access for 50 countries and expanded reciprocal visa-waiver arrangements with 29 nations.

China would further refine its cross-border travel and visa-free policies, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said earlier this month.

Last year, 30.1 million foreign nationals entered China under visa-free policies, accounting for 73.1 per cent of all inbound foreign visitors and marking a 49.5 per cent year-on-year growth, according to the National Immigration Administration. “While the hotel industry is certainly the largest beneficiary of China’s relaxed tourism policies, inbound tourists account for a very small fraction of China’s hotel demand and are unlikely to fundamentally reshape the sector,

原文链接: 南华早报

1 min · 365w
Home
Browse next
Keep exploring from this story
View this source View this language on the homepage Search related topics

More in this language

Minister caught in Malaysia’s ‘corporate mafia’ saga denies US$2.4 million bribe claim
南华早报 · 2026-03-25
Data science, AI slip as 53% of Hong Kong’s university subjects fall in QS rankings
南华早报 · 2026-03-25
Israel To Hold Zone Up To Lebanon's Litani River
Bloomberg · 2026-03-25
Open source isn't a tip jar – it's time to charge for access
The Register · 2026-03-25
Macbook Pro 16 M5 Max im Test: Der beste Laptop zum Gebrauchtwagenpreis
Golem · 2026-03-25

More from this source

Minister caught in Malaysia’s ‘corporate mafia’ saga denies US$2.4 million bribe claim
English · 2026-03-25
Data science, AI slip as 53% of Hong Kong’s university subjects fall in QS rankings
English · 2026-03-25
Former Hong Kong exchange executive Ba Shusong reported out of public sight
English · 2026-03-25
CityU professor gets 4½ months in prison for offering HK$1,000 bribe to agent
English · 2026-03-25
How climate change led to demise of once-thriving Chinese civilisation 4,500 years ago
English · 2026-03-25

Recently read