A recent survey carried out by the Tourism Bureau showed that the nation’s foreign exchange revenues from tourism reached a record high of US$11.76 billion last year, up by 6.36 percent compared with 2011.
The results of the annual survey showed that 7.3 million international tourists visited Taiwan last year, a 20.1 percent increase from 2011.
However, the survey also revealed that each international tourist last year spent an average of US$234.31 per day, a drop of 9.12 percent.
Tourists spent an average of US$256.87 a day, a fall of 8.39 percent. Business travelers spent an average of US$217.48 a day, down by 6.75 percent.
While the satisfaction rate for quality of travel among international tourists was up 2 percent to 95 percent last year, the percentage of travelers revisiting the nation was down 4 percent at 31 percent.
On average, each traveler spent 6.8 nights in Taiwan, down by 0.18 percent.
The bureau conducted the survey at Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport, Taipei International Airport (Songshan airport) and Kaohsiung International Airport.
It interviewed foreign visitors and Taiwanese expatriates living abroad as they exited Taiwan, collecting 6,015 valid samples.
In calculating the buying power of tourists, the bureau took into account money spent on accommodation, dining, transportation, shopping, entertainment and other miscellaneous items.
Chinese tourists were in first place in terms of the daily spend on shopping, averaging US$157.37 a day. They were followed by Japanese tourists and those from Hong Kong or Macau, with daily purchases topping US$71.36 and US$54.27 per person respectively.
Regarding preferred items, Japanese tourists mostly purchased snacks or other food products, while Chinese tourists tended to favor jewelry and jade items.
Regarding total travel costs, Japanese tourists exceeded all others, spending an average of US$308.65 per person per day.
Chinese tourists spent an average of US$265.26.
Except for South Korean tourists, who only reported a travel satisfaction rate of 84 percent, travelers from other countries reported satisfaction rates of more than 92 percent last year. The most satisfied tourists were from China (98.1 percent), followed by those from Australia and New Zealand (98 percent), Europe (97.4 percent), Hong Kong and Macau (96.1 percent) and the US (95.4 percent).
However, compared with 2011, the satisfaction rate among South Korean tourists was up by 12 percent, the highest increase among all tourists.
A crowd of over 200 people gathered outside the Taipei District Court as two sisters indicted for abusing a 1-year-old boy to death attended a preliminary hearing in the case yesterday afternoon. The crowd held up signs and chanted slogans calling for aggravated penalties in child abuse cases and asking for no bail and “capital punishment.” They also held white flowers in memory of the boy, nicknamed Kai Kai (剴剴), who was allegedly tortured to death by the sisters in December 2023. The boy died four months after being placed in full-time foster care with the
Taiwan yesterday condemned the recent increase in Chinese coast guard-escorted fishing vessels operating illegally in waters around the Pratas Islands (Dongsha Islands, 東沙群島) in the South China Sea. Unusually large groupings of Chinese fishing vessels began to appear around the islands on Feb. 15, when at least six motherships and 29 smaller boats were sighted, the Coast Guard Administration (CGA) said in a news release. While CGA vessels were dispatched to expel the Chinese boats, Chinese coast guard ships trespassed into Taiwan’s restricted waters and unsuccessfully attempted to interfere, the CGA said. Due to the provocation, the CGA initiated an operation to increase
A Taiwanese woman on Sunday was injured by a small piece of masonry that fell from the dome of St Peter’s Basilica in the Vatican during a visit to the church. The tourist, identified as Hsu Yun-chen (許芸禎), was struck on the forehead while she and her tour group were near Michelangelo’s sculpture Pieta. Hsu was rushed to a hospital, the group’s guide to the church, Fu Jing, said yesterday. Hsu was found not to have serious injuries and was able to continue her tour as scheduled, Fu added. Mathew Lee (李世明), Taiwan’s recently retired ambassador to the Holy See, said he met
The Shanlan Express (山嵐號), or “Mountain Mist Express,” is scheduled to launch on April 19 as part of the centennial celebration of the inauguration of the Taitung Line. The tourism express train was renovated from the Taiwan Railway Corp’s EMU500 commuter trains. It has four carriages and a seating capacity of 60 passengers. Lion Travel is arranging railway tours for the express service. Several news outlets were invited to experience the pilot tour on the new express train service, which is to operate between Hualien Railway Station and Chihshang (池上) Railway Station in Taitung County. It would also be the first tourism service