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Khao San Road Feels Pinch as European Tourists Hold Off on Bookings - video


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Posted

Only certain areas of Phuket are busy, Monday evening in Rawai at the Seafood market was not busy, Usually full of tourist this time of the year, 

If I have a drive around the area all the bike rental shops are full of bikes, 

Posted
10 hours ago, baansgr said:

Is there still 300 baht rooms and can you get a beer and a bird for £10  after buying your fake degree? Might be worth a visit if I can

 

Sadly,no.

 

The products you list are still available, but you will need to adjust your cost estimates upwards by a considerable amount😉

Posted

Thailand does not smile anymore. The new generations have no knowledge of hospitality and they have no work ethics. 40 years ago more people spoke English, now almost none. Even with their smartphone application they can’t make a sale. Rama 9 spent so much money to educate the Thai, one wonders if this money has not been totally wasted.

Posted

I agree a previous comment said they changed  everything and then hoped it would be ok. Should have left it the way it was,maybe modernise  a few things,but they completely changed it  and then that was the end of it

Posted

Agree. KSR is done long time ago. And F*** those memories "I've been there in 90s!" 

So what? 

Marco Polo hostel was 120thb? many hostels were not more than 200thb. 

Pad Thai for the price of burger? 

Everything is vanished from KSR and unfortunately it is normal. 

Thai charm is gone.

Posted (edited)
On 11/25/2024 at 11:45 AM, snoop1130 said:

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Bangkok's celebrated Khao San Road, long a hub of backpacker activity, faces a slump in hotel reservations just ahead the festive season. Khaosan Business Association President Sanga Ruangwattanakul attributes the decline to European tourists' uncertainty amidst the persisting Russia-Ukraine conflict.

 

Coinciding with a wider downturn, reservations for the key dates of December 30 to December 31 have decreased to approximate 60%, falling from last year's 70%. European visitors, predominantly from the UK, France, Germany, and Italy, usually contribute to 80% of Khao San's tourist demographic, with a lesser proportion hailing from other Asian countries.

 

In spite of the disappointing figures, Sanga remains positive, anticipating an influx of bookings closer to the festive period. Khao San Road, staying true to its energetic character, will host a New Year’s Eve countdown that aims to attract between 50,000 to 70,000 tourists. On an average, each tourist spends around 1,000 baht thereby potentially injecting over 70 million baht into the local economy.

 

 

Christmas festivities will commence on December 24 with a splendid display of Christmas lights. Sanga is optimistic about Khao San's enduring appeal as a tourist hot-spot, although he admits that sales of alcohol, a significant contributor to revenues, haven’t been as buoyant. A lack of spending from Thai visitors, conscious of financial constraints, is a factor dimming economic vibrancy.

 

To circumvent these financial challenges, Sanga proposes government measures to stimulate consumer spending, including tax breaks through initiatives such as Easy E-Receipt or the Khon La Khreung co-payment subsidy. He also supports plans to enhance revenues by focusing on the 5F industries — food, film, festivals, Thai boxing, and fashion — to attract more global tourists to Thailand.

 

Despite current obstacles, hopes remain high for Khao San Road as the New Year’s Eve countdown closes in. The belief is that the celebrated strip will once again buzz with the vibrancy and dynamism that make it an essential stop on every traveller's itinerary.

 

 

File photo for reference only

 

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-- 2024-11-25

 

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Absolutely zilch to do with the Ukraine War. Clutching at straws there (great Marillion album btw 😄 )

 

I went down there earlier this year. 300 baht for a "jug" of beer everywhere so it ain't that cheap. A friend of mine who still likes to backpack and wanted to revisit the places we stayed in 20 years ago when we first visited Asia inc. KSR paid £70/night for a room around there and it wasn't much cop by the sounds of it. Residences in Sukhumvit/Asoke for an average £100/night (will be more now due to exchange rate dipping) are in a completely different league.

 

I also suspect people are moving on. The internet and social media/blogging has made information so much more accessible and quicker to disseminate and booking places is completely different to how it was when I did it 20 years back. Then, people were mainly still carrying Lonely Planet or Rough Guide around and being able to book online or see a website was still in its infancy. KSR was still full of internet cafes at the time!

 

Laos is obviously going to have some issues with their backpacker demand after the alcohol poisoning issues but that will probably be short lived.  

Edited by MarkyM3
Posted

 "Khaosan Business Association President Sanga Ruangwattanakul attributes the decline to European tourists' uncertainty amidst the persisting Russia-Ukraine conflict."

 

Has nobody thought that the reason that bookings are down is because the average "Joe" in Europe is having a hard job feeding his family and keeping warm due to the  cost of food and utilities.

 

Footnote: "In 2023, Chris O'Shea, the CEO of British Gas owner Centrica, received a total remuneration package of £8.2 million. This was an increase of more than 80% from his 2022 pay of £4.5 million."

 

And so the prices of gas go up to help pay for this obscene increase - no doubt other utility companiess have a similar story to tell - B.P. for instance:-

 

" BP's 2023 profits were $13.8 billion, which was the second highest annual profit in a decade."

 

So basically, people are paying for these massive profits and salaries out of the money that they would otherwise be spending on non-essentials - like holidays!!!

 

Posted (edited)
26 minutes ago, sambum said:

 "Khaosan Business Association President Sanga Ruangwattanakul attributes the decline to European tourists' uncertainty amidst the persisting Russia-Ukraine conflict."

 

Has nobody thought that the reason that bookings are down is because the average "Joe" in Europe is having a hard job feeding his family and keeping warm due to the  cost of food and utilities.

 

Footnote: "In 2023, Chris O'Shea, the CEO of British Gas owner Centrica, received a total remuneration package of £8.2 million. This was an increase of more than 80% from his 2022 pay of £4.5 million."

 

And so the prices of gas go up to help pay for this obscene increase - no doubt other utility companiess have a similar story to tell - B.P. for instance:-

 

" BP's 2023 profits were $13.8 billion, which was the second highest annual profit in a decade."

 

So basically, people are paying for these massive profits and salaries out of the money that they would otherwise be spending on non-essentials - like holidays!!!

 

Every EVA flight I've been on for many years is sold out without fail. Every time. And that's despite premium economy and business fares going up by >2/3 in the last 5 years. There's still plenty of money floating around in the UK tbh and I live there most of the year - for the time being at least. Unemployment is still near a record low level and I think people are still prioritising having a holiday.

 

I totally agree with you on the cost of living but most backpackers have barely started working, or are on career breaks/sabbaticals and they are the meat and potatoes of KSR's tourist trade. Also, the UK is only one component of it. So I think your points are more applicable to tourist trade elsewhere - whether in other parts of Thailand or other countries. 

 

High executive pay is hardly a new thing and I don't think has much to do with whether backpackers are coming to KSR. The price of oil also determines BP profits, executive pay is a small element in it. Oil prices have dropped right back lately, as has the BP share price.

 

Not saying I agree with excessive pay at all btw - a lot of execs are unjustifiably rewarded for poor performance - but by Western standards the UK is actually relatively moderate.  

Edited by MarkyM3
  • Thumbs Up 1
Posted
9 minutes ago, MarkyM3 said:

Every EVA flight I've been on for many years is sold out without fail. Every time. And that's despite premium economy and business fares going up by 2/3 in the last 5 years. There's still plenty of money floating around in the UK tbh and I live there most of the year - for the time being at least. Unemployment is still near a record low level and I think people are still prioritising having a holiday.

 

I totally agree with you on the cost of living but most backpackers have barely started working, or are on career breaks/sabbaticals and they are the meat and potatoes of KSR's tourist trade. Also, the UK is only one component of it. So I think your points are more applicable to tourist trade elsewhere - whether in other parts of Thailand or other countries. 

 

High executive pay is hardly a new thing and I don't think has much to do with whether backpackers are coming to KSR. The price of oil also determines BP profits, executive pay is a small element in it. Oil prices have dropped right back lately, as has the BP share price.

 

Not saying I agree with excessive pay at all btw - a lot of execs are unjustifiably rewarded for poor performance - but by Western standards the UK is actually relatively moderate.  

 

".........but by Western standards the UK is actually relatively moderate."

 

As are the pensions!  But without getting political, or into a long discourse about it, you may be right about there still being a bit of money to be had in the UK, but I don't think that the average back packers to KSR fall into that category, and that is the point of the thread, surely?

Posted (edited)
19 minutes ago, sambum said:

 

".........but by Western standards the UK is actually relatively moderate."

 

As are the pensions!  But without getting political, or into a long discourse about it, you may be right about there still being a bit of money to be had in the UK, but I don't think that the average back packers to KSR fall into that category, and that is the point of the thread, surely?

 

Well, yes state pensions aren't great but if you look at Europe, people are obliged to pay a lot more in to the state system than in the UK. Private provision is supposed to be more of a feature in the UK. But yeah, I won't disagree necessarily on that point, the main issue I feel is the frozen pension which is entirely unfair.  

 

Tbh, as someone who stayed in KSR in my backpacking days (2005-8) and revisited a few times since (twice during the pandemic when it was utterly dead, my ex gf liked a restaurant nearby, and once more in Jan 2024),  most of the clientele are middle class kids on gap years before or after Uni, people on career breaks/sabbaticals (like I was) and older hippy types. You'd be surprised at how many of them do have money....most are probably financed by mum and dad, or used savings if they work. They tend to be on trips of several months (except perhaps for the older hippy types). One reason KSR is struggling is it has tried to go upmarket and it isn't good value for money, as my post higher up mentioned. Why pay £70 for a crappy room there in a "boutique hotel" which in reality is rubbish when you can stay elsewhere on a similar budget and get so much more for your money. Along with the fact people are trying out new places.

 

Last time I went to KSR in Jan this year it was doing fine. But it is still grubby as hell so again, the prices don't match the reality really. You can stay in Lamai, Koh Samui on the beach in an A-frame hut for a few hundred baht a night still - that's real backpacking, not the facsimile that KSR is. 

Edited by MarkyM3
Posted

A lot of EU foreigners are a bit worried over th claims made by Putin and co , 

I know a few who have said they don’t fancy «  flying in that direction at the moment ». I live and worked in one of the busiest tourist resorts in the south of France , when Iraq invaded Koweït, work suddenly  became quite a bit quieter for us, even though we are far from those areas. Politics make a huge impact on tourism. I think many families will travel less long haul when  prices have risen at home, tax hikes etc. I have never seen the European resorts so busy in all my professional life , packed to the rafters.

Trains and budget airlines are sold a year in advance, as with easyjet for example. 

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