China, Vietnam reopen railway line amid tourism boom after 5-year pause
As Beijing expands visa-free travel, the route could also make it easier for international tourists to visit China, analysts say

China and Vietnam have reopened a passenger train route that was suspended during the early months of the pandemic, a move that could boost already surging tourism between the neighbours and attract more international travellers to visit the mainland without a visa, analysts said.
Trains started running on Sunday for the 11.5-hour trip between Nanning in Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region and the Vietnamese capital Hanoi, according to Xinhua News Agency. The service, launched in 2009, was paused in February 2020 when borders closed throughout Asia to curb the spread of the pandemic.
The reopening of the route would serve tourism growth on both sides of the 1,297-km (806-mile) land border, analysts said.
“Over the past two years there’s been a trend of Vietnamese coming in and their economy is expanding fast,” said Steven Zhao, CEO of the Guilin-based online travel agency China Highlights.
After they arrive in Nanning, Vietnamese passengers would be able to transfer to China’s high-speed railway network for cities that they typically like to visit, such as Beijing and Shanghai, Zhao added.
People travelling to mainland China from Vietnam accounted for 4 per cent of all arrivals processed in 2023, according to market research firm Statista. By the third quarter of 2024, they made up 23,500 visitors, second only to Hong Kong as an offshore source, according to the Ministry of Culture and Tourism.