Chinese flight bookings rise by 20% ahead of April holiday break despite soaring airfares

Flight bookings in China have grown 20 per cent year on year ahead of the annual Ching Ming Festival holiday that starts this weekend and follows public school breaks in much of the country – despite higher airfares on account of rising fuel prices. Holiday bookings had reached 2.04 million flight t

South China Morning Post
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Chinese flight bookings rise by 20% ahead of April holiday break despite soaring airfares

Flight bookings in China have grown 20 per cent year on year ahead of the annual Ching Ming Festival holiday that starts this weekend and follows public school breaks in much of the country – despite higher airfares on account of rising fuel prices.

Holiday bookings had reached 2.04 million flight tickets as of Thursday, state broadcaster CCTV said, citing figures from data provider TravelSky Technology. CCTV’s Sunday report said cross-border holiday flight bookings inbound and outbound stood at 600,000, up 12 per cent year on year.

Spring breaks for public junior and secondary schools in many parts of China will add April 1 to 3 to the April 4 to 6 public holiday, the broadcaster said, adding that the number of intended air passengers from March 31 to April 1 had risen 1.6 times compared with the previous two days.

Ching Ming Festival, also known as tomb-sweeping day, is traditionally a time to pay tribute to ancestors.

The longer April holiday extended by the spring break offers an opportunity for some families to bring forward their May Day travel plans.

Previous airline annoucements that domestic flight fuel surcharges, which are adjusted routinely on the 5th of each month, will increase on April 5th has turned this year’s Ching Ming Festival holiday into a low-price window period for long-distance travel. Advance flight bookings for China’s annual May Day break have also increased by nearly 20 per cent over the same period of 2025 because of the potential increases, CCTV said.

Spots in Jiangsu, Zhejiang and Sichuan provinces in particular would gain from this year’s bookings, the broadcaster added.

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South China Morning Post

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