
Travel agencies are bracing for an exceptionally busy Labour Day “golden week” as Hong Kong residents pour across the border in record numbers. Industry leaders tell the South China Morning Post that bookings for organised tours to mainland China are up 30–40 % on last year, with short three-to-four-day itineraries in the Greater Bay Area—Foshan, Zhongshan, Dongguan and Shenzhen—leading demand.
For travellers unsure about visa or entry-permit requirements, VisaHQ can streamline the paperwork in just a few clicks. Hong Kong passport holders and residents can check whether they need mainland visas, fill out application forms online, and arrange courier pick-ups directly through the platform, saving time ahead of the holiday rush (https://www.visahq.com/hong-kong/).
Several factors lie behind the spike. First, the resumption of the full high-speed-rail timetable between Hong Kong West Kowloon and 66 mainland destinations has cut journey times to under an hour for many GBA cities, making same-day and weekend trips logistically easy. Second, modest fuel-surcharge increases on regional flights have nudged price-sensitive travellers toward coach and rail packages that bundle transport, hotels and meals at a lower total cost than comparable trips to Southeast Asia. Agents also cite improved hygiene and safety standards on the mainland after three years of pandemic-driven investment in public-health infrastructure. Hoteliers have rolled out deep-clean protocols and contactless check-in systems, while local governments have upgraded tourist police patrols and English-language signage—reassuring family and senior segments that previously hesitated to venture beyond Guangdong. For corporate mobility managers, the surge signals tighter seat and room availability around 1–5 May. Multinationals moving staff between Hong Kong and mainland branch offices should secure tickets early, consider virtual meetings, or route travellers via Zhuhai or Huizhou airports. Cross-border shuttle operators warn that evening return slots on 2 May and 5 May are close to full. Longer term, the data reinforce a structural shift: Hong Kong residents are rediscovering the mainland as their primary leisure outlet. That trend could divert discretionary spending away from outbound markets such as Thailand and Singapore, while further entrenching the GBA’s role as the city’s de facto domestic tourism hinterland.
For travellers unsure about visa or entry-permit requirements, VisaHQ can streamline the paperwork in just a few clicks. Hong Kong passport holders and residents can check whether they need mainland visas, fill out application forms online, and arrange courier pick-ups directly through the platform, saving time ahead of the holiday rush (https://www.visahq.com/hong-kong/).
Several factors lie behind the spike. First, the resumption of the full high-speed-rail timetable between Hong Kong West Kowloon and 66 mainland destinations has cut journey times to under an hour for many GBA cities, making same-day and weekend trips logistically easy. Second, modest fuel-surcharge increases on regional flights have nudged price-sensitive travellers toward coach and rail packages that bundle transport, hotels and meals at a lower total cost than comparable trips to Southeast Asia. Agents also cite improved hygiene and safety standards on the mainland after three years of pandemic-driven investment in public-health infrastructure. Hoteliers have rolled out deep-clean protocols and contactless check-in systems, while local governments have upgraded tourist police patrols and English-language signage—reassuring family and senior segments that previously hesitated to venture beyond Guangdong. For corporate mobility managers, the surge signals tighter seat and room availability around 1–5 May. Multinationals moving staff between Hong Kong and mainland branch offices should secure tickets early, consider virtual meetings, or route travellers via Zhuhai or Huizhou airports. Cross-border shuttle operators warn that evening return slots on 2 May and 5 May are close to full. Longer term, the data reinforce a structural shift: Hong Kong residents are rediscovering the mainland as their primary leisure outlet. That trend could divert discretionary spending away from outbound markets such as Thailand and Singapore, while further entrenching the GBA’s role as the city’s de facto domestic tourism hinterland.