Chinese tourists returning to Japan with new travel style

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(FILES) This photo taken on November 28, 2024 shows Mount Fuji pictured in the background as people walk along a bridge connecting stores at a popular outlet shopping centre in the city of Gotemba, Shizuoka prefecture, some 100 kms southwest of Tokyo. Unfounded online rumours warning that a huge earthquake will soon strike Japan are taking a toll on travel firms and airlines who report less demand from worried Hong Kongers. (Photo by Richard A. Brooks / AFP)

More travellers are seeking immersive experiences related to Japanese cuisine, culture and scenery.

PHOTO: AFP

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TOKYO - Chinese tourists are driving a recent surge in inbound travel to Japan, with arrivals now exceeding pre-pandemic 2019 levels, though their travel habits are shifting noticeably.

Previously, Chinese tourism in Japan was defined by large group tours and shopping sprees known as “bakugai”. Nowadays, however, more travellers are seeking immersive experiences related to Japanese cuisine, culture and scenery, according to the Japan National Tourism Organisation.

A total of 3.13 million Chinese travellers visited Japan in the first four months of 2025, topping the 2.89 million recorded during the same period in 2019.

While the number of visitors from China was slow to rebound after the pandemic, arrivals have steadily increased since the Chinese government lifted its ban on group tours to Japan in 2023, reaching 2.42 million that year and 6.98 million in 2024.

Growth has continued into 2025, with year-on-year increases of 135.7 per cent in January, 57.3 per cent in February, 46.2 per cent in March and 43.4 per cent in April.

The shift in travel preferences is partly driven by Chinese travellers in their 30s and 40s, many of whom have visited Japan before, now choosing family trips with their children over group tours.

The JNTO is working to better target that market, including opening an account on a popular Chinese social media platform last fall.

Meanwhile, visitor numbers from Hong Kong, which are tallied separately from mainland China, increased 30.8 per cent in January from the previous year but declined 5 per cent in February and 9.9 per cent in March.

A Japanese manga predicting a major disaster in Japan this July is believed to have discouraged travel.

Posts about the manga The Future I Saw went viral after some claimed that its artist, Ryo Tatsuki, also predicted the 2011 earthquake and tsunami in northeastern Japan, among other events. KYODO NEWS

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