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Feb 11, 2026

Record 9.5 billion journeys forecast as China’s Spring Festival travel rush kicks off

Record 9.5 billion journeys forecast as China’s Spring Festival travel rush kicks off
China’s annual 40-day Spring Festival migration—dubbed the world’s largest human movement—officially began this week, and officials expect a record 9.5 billion passenger trips by road, rail, air and water, the National Development and Reform Commission told the Associated Press on 10 February.

The projection eclipses last year’s already-stunning 8.6 billion journeys and reflects a return to pre-pandemic mobility patterns as incomes stabilise and visa-free entry for many foreigners boosts inbound legs. Railway operator China State Railway Group said it has scheduled up to 1,300 extra services per day, while the Civil Aviation Administration of China approved 2,100 additional domestic and international flights during the 2 February–13 March “chunyun” window.

International visitors facing tight timelines to obtain or renew travel documents can streamline the process through VisaHQ, which provides step-by-step guidance on Chinese visa categories, digital document checklists and real-time application tracking—all accessible via a single dashboard (https://www.visahq.com/china/). The service helps tourists, business travelers and expatriates stay compliant even amid the holiday rush and shifting entry policies.

Record 9.5 billion journeys forecast as China’s Spring Festival travel rush kicks off


For global companies, the travel surge is a double-edged sword. On one hand, factory shutdowns and logistics slowdowns can disrupt supply chains; on the other, loosened internal-migration curbs allow millions of migrant workers to reunite with families, sustaining consumer confidence. Multinationals such as Volkswagen and Apple have staggered production cycles and authorised remote work to bridge the two-week peak.

China’s government has rolled out digital ticketing, facial-recognition boarding and expanded high-speed-rail capacity to mitigate congestion, yet videos from Beijing and Guangzhou stations on 10 February showed concourses packed shoulder-to-shoulder. Analysts advise expatriates and business visitors to avoid travel on 15–18 February—considered the “super-peak”—and to secure hotel rooms well ahead, as occupancy in tier-one cities routinely exceeds 95 percent.

The sheer scale of movement provides a live stress-test of China’s upgraded mobility infrastructure, from newly electrified trunk lines to expanded airport terminals. Performance over the next month will influence investor confidence in Beijing’s pledge to build a “national unified market” with frictionless internal circulation.
VisaHQ's expert visas and immigration team helps individuals and companies navigate global travel, work, and residency requirements. We handle document preparation, application filings, government agencies coordination, every aspect necessary to ensure fast, compliant, and stress-free approvals.
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