TTG Asia
Asia/Singapore Saturday, 25th April 2026
Page 644

Bangkok mulls longer attraction operating hours

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Bangkok cityscape. Bangkok night view in the business district. at twilight.

The Bangkok Metropolitan Administration (BMA) is working with a number of tourism associations on extending operating hours for attractions, especially those along the Chao Phraya River, to encourage longer stays in the Thai capital among travellers.

According to a Bangkok Post report, governor Chadchart Sittipunt said extended opening hours of the city’s tourist attractions, such as museums and temples, would not attract only foreign visitors, but also domestic tourists, to spend more time in the city.

Longer operating hours at Bangkok tourist attractions would allow travellers to do more in the city

With attractions staying open through the night, travellers can avoid the hotter times of the day and traffic congestion during the peak hours.

BMA will take public safety into consideration as it makes its plans for extended operating hours.

Meanwhile, Chadchart also revealed plans to install decorative lights around tourists attractions along the Chao Phraya River and to work with local authorities in Venice to have Bangkok declared as its twin city.

South Korea ends outdoor mask mandate

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E-visas, package tours from China to Macau on the horizon

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China may soon resume e-visas to allow individual Chinese residents to visit Macau and permit the sale of package tours to Macau, announced Macau’s chief executive, Ho Iat Seng, on September 24.

Ho told reporters that preparation would take at least a month, so the resumption of e-visas and package tours could be expected in late October or early November.

China will resume e-visas and packaged tours for Chinese residents to Macau

For a start, the package tours would be accessible to residents from Guangdong, Zhejiang, Jiangsu and Fujian provinces, and Shanghai. These markets represented almost 60 per cent of mainland visits to Macau in 2019.

The reopening scheme is expected to bring some 40,000 daily visitors to Macau on average.

Currently, Chinese tourists to Macau have to complete a week-long approval process.

Travellers from Hong Kong and overseas will continue to face a seven-day quarantine at a designated hotel, plus an additional three days of health monitoring.

Japan is top destination for responsible Indonesian travellers: YouGov

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Food is love

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Philippines concludes first national tourism job fair

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Innovating the future of online travel booking

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Collaboration key to bridging hygiene gaps in ASEAN

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ASEAN casts bright tourism outlook on World Tourism Day

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Tourism players rejoice at Japan’s long-awaited reopening

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FIT travellers’ long wait to enter Japan is soon to end as the country prepares to allow visa-free, independent tourism and remove the country’s daily entry cap, currently set at 50,000, from October 11.

Prime minister Fumio Kishida made the announcement, which marks the end of more than two years of strict border measures, on Thursday at the UN General Assembly in New York.

Yoshie: demand will be massive because the Japanese yen is very cheap now

Under the new system, tourists will still need to show proof of triple-vaccination or a negative Covid-19 test before travel, but will no longer require visa sponsorship, a rule which has been in place since September 7.

Kishida said Japan’s opening up to visa-free, independent travel is intended to “support the travel, entertainment and other industries that have been struggling during the coronavirus pandemic”.

Japan’s tourism players have welcomed the news, saying it can provide a much-needed boost to the industry, which has seen slow inbound demand since steps began in June towards full reopening of the country.

“We’re very grateful to hear the news, which will be a big support to the tourism industry,” said Chihaya Suetake, a representative of All Nippon Travel Agents Association.

“It’s really going to help as many (inbound) tourists have not come back as they don’t like group tours,” Mike Holland, a representative of Okinawa Prefecture’s Chatan Town Tourism Association, told TTG Asia at Tourism Expo Japan.

Noémie Gaildrat, marketing assistant at Tokyo-based tourism marketing agency Makes Co. said overseas markets have been looking forward to a full reopening for a long time, adding that many of her contacts had already planned or booked Japan trips for the autumn before the announcement.

“Demand will be massive, especially so because the Japanese yen is very cheap now,” said Yoshie Kakimoto Mohanty, managing director of Kagoshima-based tour company and operator Tabitto.

In preparation of a faster tourism recovery from October, she is preparing FAM trips for agents in Europe to showcase what the prefecture has to offer now, more than two years since the country was fully open to tourists.

Okinawa’s Holland agrees that the return of independent, visa-free travel to Japan is the perfect opportunity to raise awareness among international markets of all the country’s regional tourism products and services.