
With China’s 9-day Spring Festival holiday just two weeks away, a growing cohort of under-35 travellers is seizing new visa-free options to plan last-minute overseas trips, according to a 3 February report by China Youth Daily. Airline and online-agency data show outbound search volumes by Gen-Z and millennial users up 62 percent compared with the same pre-holiday week in 2025.
Australia, Thailand and the United Arab Emirates top the wish-list for mainland residents seeking warmer weather and shopping opportunities, while inbound demand is surging from neighbouring South-Korean and Japanese travellers drawn by China’s winter festivals and weakening yuan.
Travel analysts note that the youthful demographic is highly price-sensitive but willing to extend stays thanks to flexible remote-work arrangements. Many combine leisure with so-called “work-cation” days, increasing average trip length to 8.2 nights. The trend poses challenges for corporate mobility planners, who may face tighter seat availability on regional routes and higher hotel rates in gateway cities immediately after the holiday as vacationers return.
For travelers who still need documentation beyond the new visa-waiver schemes, VisaHQ can simplify the paperwork. The service provides step-by-step guidance, real-time status tracking, and courier pick-up for both China-bound and outbound visas—details are available at https://www.visahq.com/china/ Using a trusted platform can make spontaneous Spring Festival getaways far easier to lock in.
Tourism boards have ramped up QR-based arrival guides and digital-payment workshops to help foreign visitors navigate China’s increasingly cash-light environment. Companies expecting international interns or graduate trainees in Q1 2026 should remind them to download UnionPay or Alipay international wallets in advance.
Australia, Thailand and the United Arab Emirates top the wish-list for mainland residents seeking warmer weather and shopping opportunities, while inbound demand is surging from neighbouring South-Korean and Japanese travellers drawn by China’s winter festivals and weakening yuan.
Travel analysts note that the youthful demographic is highly price-sensitive but willing to extend stays thanks to flexible remote-work arrangements. Many combine leisure with so-called “work-cation” days, increasing average trip length to 8.2 nights. The trend poses challenges for corporate mobility planners, who may face tighter seat availability on regional routes and higher hotel rates in gateway cities immediately after the holiday as vacationers return.
For travelers who still need documentation beyond the new visa-waiver schemes, VisaHQ can simplify the paperwork. The service provides step-by-step guidance, real-time status tracking, and courier pick-up for both China-bound and outbound visas—details are available at https://www.visahq.com/china/ Using a trusted platform can make spontaneous Spring Festival getaways far easier to lock in.
Tourism boards have ramped up QR-based arrival guides and digital-payment workshops to help foreign visitors navigate China’s increasingly cash-light environment. Companies expecting international interns or graduate trainees in Q1 2026 should remind them to download UnionPay or Alipay international wallets in advance.





