
Day two of the Easter-Qingming break saw another mass movement across the border despite persistent downpours. By 9 p.m. on 4 April, Immigration Department counters showed 532,023 Hongkongers had left the city, 76 per cent via land checkpoints. The Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge registered 65,518 crossings as travellers sought alternatives to saturated Lo Wu and Lok Ma Chau lines. Many were lured by Shenzhen’s newly opened Science & Technology Museum in Guangming district, fast becoming a marquee ‘rainy-day’ attraction alongside mega-malls and outlet villages.
For those planning similar getaways—or more complex multi-country itineraries—VisaHQ’s Hong Kong team can streamline the visa process, providing real-time requirements, expedited turnaround and doorstep document collection. Check how they can support your next cross-border trip at https://www.visahq.com/hong-kong/
Tour operators recorded a spike in last-minute hotel bookings, with average room rates in Futian climbing 18 per cent over the holiday period. Corporate mobility planners note that the pattern – leisure travellers filling north-bound capacity while business travellers largely head south on weekday mornings – is creating asymmetric traffic flows. Firms with Shenzhen offices are experimenting with staggered start times and remote-work Fridays to keep productivity intact during peak tourism surges. The episode underscores how mainland leisure options are reshaping Hong Kong residents’ travel habits and exerting pressure on cross-boundary infrastructure. With the July summer peak looming, transport authorities are weighing whether to pilot timed-slot bookings for popular land checkpoints, similar to schemes used during the Golden Week in the Greater Bay Area.
For those planning similar getaways—or more complex multi-country itineraries—VisaHQ’s Hong Kong team can streamline the visa process, providing real-time requirements, expedited turnaround and doorstep document collection. Check how they can support your next cross-border trip at https://www.visahq.com/hong-kong/
Tour operators recorded a spike in last-minute hotel bookings, with average room rates in Futian climbing 18 per cent over the holiday period. Corporate mobility planners note that the pattern – leisure travellers filling north-bound capacity while business travellers largely head south on weekday mornings – is creating asymmetric traffic flows. Firms with Shenzhen offices are experimenting with staggered start times and remote-work Fridays to keep productivity intact during peak tourism surges. The episode underscores how mainland leisure options are reshaping Hong Kong residents’ travel habits and exerting pressure on cross-boundary infrastructure. With the July summer peak looming, transport authorities are weighing whether to pilot timed-slot bookings for popular land checkpoints, similar to schemes used during the Golden Week in the Greater Bay Area.