Tag: China Inbound
China resumes quarantine-free travel with Macau
China has reopened her borders with Macau on August 3, facilitating quarantine-free travel between the two lands once more.
It marks the end of a...
Fresh round of mass testing, extended lockdowns hits China
Shanghai, Tianjin and Beihai are some of the major cities in China that have ordered repeated mass testing or extended lockdowns on residents as...
China tightens Covid curbs again
Eastern Chinese cities have tightened Covid-19 curbs on July 3 in response to new infection clusters, setting fresh delays to the country's tourism and...
China reduces quarantine for international travellers
China has reduced the quarantine period for international travellers, its National Health Commission announced on June 28, 2022.
Overseas travellers will now quarantine at a...
Beijing 2022 game sites to be converted into attractions
Various venues used for the Beijing 2022 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games will be transformed into sports, entertainment and tourist facilities, with most of...
A peek into future travel
Travel giant Trip.com is at the forefront of China’s travel recovery, and has aligned its products according to new trends in domestic tourism. CEO Jane Sun tells Pamela Chow what global players can learn from the market’s revival
Big lessons from big spenders
China has enjoyed an outpouring of pent-up demand since hotels reopened in March, with big spenders lifting the country’s hospitality industry out of the doldrums.
The Lux Collective expands Yunnan portfolio
Luxury hospitality management group, The Lux Collective, has signed four retreats along Yunnan's legendary trade route, Tea Horse Road, with Lijiang Yulong Tourism Corporation.
The...
Travel trade sees ray of hope with Singapore-China “fast lane” pact
Singapore’s move to launch a “fast lane” between the city-state and China to facilitate essential business and official travel between both countries offers a glimmer of hope for travel agents in Singapore.
Changing face of Chinese travellers
All eyes are on tourist movements in China now, as they not only serve as the first indication of recuperated demand, but also as a trajectory for how domestic and outbound travel may eventually recover.