More bookings, shorter trips: Chinese adjust to higher fuel prices for Labour Day break
Domestic flight bookings up about 8 per cent and domestic package-tour reservations up about 10 per cent, survey finds

Domestic flight bookings were up about 8 per cent year on year and domestic package-tour reservations were about 10 per cent higher ahead of the break, even after fuel prices shot up because of the war in Iran, according to a survey by travel marketing and technology firm China Trading Desk.
Rural and second-tier city destinations in China were popular this year, it found, as well as “short-haul” trips to perennial favourites in other parts of East Asia.
“The bigger change is how they travel, not whether they travel,” said China Trading Desk CEO Subramania Bhatt. “Economic factors are now the top travel influence in the survey, and travellers are still willing to go but are making more deliberate, value-checked choices rather than booking blindly.”
China is taking May 1 to 5 off this year for Labour Day, also called May Day. In some parts of China, school spring breaks overlapping with the holiday will give students up to eight days off.
According to the International Air Transport Association, the global average jet fuel price for the week ending April 17 was US$184.63 a barrel – more than double the average for the previous year.