Spring break gives Shanghai a boost in family vacation spending


Shanghai's holiday economy is getting an early lift as spring breaks in multiple provinces overlap with the Qingming Festival travel period, drawing family travelers to the city's theme parks and extending demand into hotels, transport and nearby destinations, Jiefang Daily reported on April 2.

The most visible signs of the surge have been at Shanghai Disneyland and Legoland Shanghai Resort, which both saw strong traffic on April 1, the first day of spring break for many schoolchildren in provinces including Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Sichuan, Anhui, Hunan and Hubei.

Search interest for Shanghai Disneyland and Legoland jumped eightfold and fivefold respectively in March, according to platform data cited by the report, putting both parks among the top 10 most-booked spring-break attractions.

But the broader significance for Shanghai lies beyond packed queues at the gates. The longer school holiday appears to be widening the travel radius for family trips and helping turn what might otherwise have been a short festival break into a multi-day getaway centered on the city and its surrounding areas.

Families with children accounted for nearly 40 percent of vacation-product bookings for departures between April 1 and April 6, up 17 percentage points from a year earlier, while orders from that group rose by nearly 200 percent.

Flight bookings were also up by about 20 percent year on year, with passenger numbers for travelers under 18 rising 47 percent on domestic routes and 22 percent on international routes.

Average domestic hotel prices for stays between April 1 and April 6 were higher than a year earlier, and higher-end hotel bookings gained share as family travelers showed a greater willingness to pay for quality accommodation, the report said.

Yangtze River Delta families appear to be driving much of that demand. Jiangsu, Anhui and Zhejiang posted some of the highest shares of parent-child orders, at 38 percent to 46 percent, according to the report.

One Suzhou father told Jiefang Daily he left for Legoland with his two children at 8am on April 1 and arrived around 10am by high-speed rail, illustrating how Shanghai's transport links help convert nearby urban clusters into a ready-made source of short-haul vacation demand.

Operators are also trying to turn heavy foot traffic into longer and deeper spending. Jiefang Daily said Shanghai Disneyland is benefiting from its 10th anniversary celebrations and character-themed events, while Legoland has linked up with cultural and tourism resources in Jinshan District to offer dining and lodging incentives aimed at shifting visitors from one-day trips to overnight stays. Meituan data cited by the newspaper showed bookings for Legoland's two-adult, one-child family tickets rose 65 percent from a week earlier.

Industry observers quoted by the report expect the family-travel boom to continue through mid-to-late April as more regions enter spring break. For Shanghai, that means the city's holiday economy is being supported not just by a single public holiday, but by a changing travel calendar that is encouraging families to spend more time, and more money, on short vacation trips.

Source: City News Service