
New high-speed rail connections to multiple Chinese cities see heavy advance bookings ahead of the Spring Festival holiday
Tickets for the expanded high-speed rail network linking Hong Kong with mainland China are nearly sold out for the period immediately preceding the Lunar New Year holiday, reflecting strong travel demand and the popularity of newly launched routes.
All classes of seats on services from Hong Kong’s West Kowloon Station to 14 of 16 recently added mainland destinations were fully booked from Friday through next Sunday, according to online booking checks, with major hubs such as Nanjing, Wuxi and Hefei among the most sought-after.
The new connections form part of a broader expansion that now offers direct services from West Kowloon to over one hundred cities across the mainland.
Rail travellers were snapping up seats on long-haul services at premium and standard fare levels in the run-up to the Spring Festival peak.
For example, second-class tickets for the roughly seven-hour trip from Hong Kong to Nanjing South were priced at over HK$1,000, while business-class fares approached HK$3,500.
All classes to other popular destinations including Wuxi East and Hefei South were likewise exhausted for the key pre-holiday days.
The strong uptake comes as Hong Kong and mainland authorities gear up for what is expected to be a record travel surge during the Lunar New Year “Golden Week,” with border checkpoints and transport services preparing for high passenger volumes.
Forecasts suggest that around 1.43 million arrivals from the mainland could enter the city over the nine-day period, requiring cross-department coordination to manage flows efficiently at land, sea and air checkpoints.
This surge in bookings underlines renewed enthusiasm for cross-border travel and the importance of the high-speed rail link as a spine of connectivity between Hong Kong and China’s interior cities.
The rail expansion, which includes destinations across several provinces and upgraded sleeper services to key hubs, reflects broader efforts to support tourism, business travel and family reunions during one of the busiest periods of the year for passenger movement.
All classes of seats on services from Hong Kong’s West Kowloon Station to 14 of 16 recently added mainland destinations were fully booked from Friday through next Sunday, according to online booking checks, with major hubs such as Nanjing, Wuxi and Hefei among the most sought-after.
The new connections form part of a broader expansion that now offers direct services from West Kowloon to over one hundred cities across the mainland.
Rail travellers were snapping up seats on long-haul services at premium and standard fare levels in the run-up to the Spring Festival peak.
For example, second-class tickets for the roughly seven-hour trip from Hong Kong to Nanjing South were priced at over HK$1,000, while business-class fares approached HK$3,500.
All classes to other popular destinations including Wuxi East and Hefei South were likewise exhausted for the key pre-holiday days.
The strong uptake comes as Hong Kong and mainland authorities gear up for what is expected to be a record travel surge during the Lunar New Year “Golden Week,” with border checkpoints and transport services preparing for high passenger volumes.
Forecasts suggest that around 1.43 million arrivals from the mainland could enter the city over the nine-day period, requiring cross-department coordination to manage flows efficiently at land, sea and air checkpoints.
This surge in bookings underlines renewed enthusiasm for cross-border travel and the importance of the high-speed rail link as a spine of connectivity between Hong Kong and China’s interior cities.
The rail expansion, which includes destinations across several provinces and upgraded sleeper services to key hubs, reflects broader efforts to support tourism, business travel and family reunions during one of the busiest periods of the year for passenger movement.











































