Vietnam a magnet for South Korean travelers: report

By Nguyen Quy   July 30, 2019 | 10:56 pm PT
Vietnam a magnet for South Korean travelers: report
Foreign tourists visit the Central Post Office in downtown Ho Chi Minh City. Photo by Shutterstock/Thoai.
Vietnam is among the top three overseas travel destinations for South Koreans in 2019, a new report says.

The country is a leading choice for South Korean travelers, ranking third after Japan and mainland China, with their number expected to increase by 30 percent this year to four million, according to Global Destination Cities Index (GDCI), published this week by Mastercard, which ranks the biggest globetrotters by country and their favorite destinations. 

Last year the number grew by 44 percent to more than 3.4 million, accounting for more than a fourth of all foreign arrivals (15.5 million), Vietnam National Administration of Tourism (VNAT) data shows.

A 15-day visa waiver for South Korean tourists and a rise in the number of direct flights between the two countries have made Vietnam increasingly a leading choice for South Korean tourists.

South Korean carriers Asiana and Jeju Air are offering daily flights between Busan and Da Nang, and the latter became the top foreign destination for South Koreans last summer, Korean e-commerce website Ticket Monster reported.

Last December Jeju Air began daily direct flights between Daegu City and Da Nang. Korean Air, the oldest and largest air carrier in Asia, also launched a direct service between Busan and Da Nang last year.

South Korea is the biggest foreign investor in Vietnam, with electronics giant Samsung making up almost 25 percent of Vietnam's exports last year of $245 billion.

A South Korean tourist spends $1,120 while traveling in Vietnam, the fourth highest in a list topped by Australians, the VNAT said.

"Vietnam remains one of the favorite destinations for South Koreans," said Park Jong Sun, head of the Korea Tourism Board representative office in Vietnam.

"Famous tourist spots such as Ha Long Bay, Hanoi, Da Nang, and Hoi An are heavily favored, particularly middle-aged tourists."

According to Mastercard, the U.S. was the biggest source market for international travel globally, followed by mainland China, Germany, the U.K., France, and South Korea.

Overnight visitors from mainland China, South Korea, Japan, and Taiwan now account for 18.5 percent of global travel expenditure in the world’s top 200 cities, up 11 percent from a decade ago.

Vietnam is in the midst of a tourism boom with a record 15.5 million arrivals last year, up 20 percent from the previous year. It raked in revenues of VND383 trillion ($16.5 billion) from foreign visitors, according to the General Statistics Office.

Tourism last year contributed 8.39 percent to the country’s GDP. The government seeks to make the industry an economic spearhead, making up 10 percent of GDP in 2020 with around 20 million foreign arrivals.

It has stepped up efforts to influence foreign tourists to return to the country through relaxed visa policies and other incentives.

 
 
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