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Picture courtesy of Kaoded.

 

The number of Malaysian tourists entering Thailand has now surpassed that of Chinese tourists, according to data shared by Dr. Sitthipong Sitthiphatprapa, President of the Hatyai Songkhla Hotel Association. The figures, covering the period from 1 January to 8 June 2025, show that 2,041,002 Malaysian nationals visited, compared to 2,029,481 Chinese tourists, a shift that signals a notable decline in Chinese arrivals.

 

Dr. Sitthipong noted that while the volume of Malaysian tourists now exceeds that of Chinese visitors, it does not necessarily indicate a significant increase in arrivals from Malaysia. Rather, the relative gain is largely attributed to the downturn in Chinese tourist numbers, which have dropped sharply this year.

 

In Songkhla province, including popular border town Sadao, tourism levels have remained steady overall, but hotel occupancy rates have declined. The drop is attributed to two key factors:

 

1. Many tourists are bypassing Songkhla and heading to other destinations within Thailand.

 

2. A rise in unlicensed daily rental accommodations, including illegal condo rentals and repurposed buildings, has fragmented the market and affected the formal hospitality sector.

 

Dr. Sitthipong warned that this unchecked growth in the informal accommodation sector poses a risk to legal businesses and urged the government to enforce existing laws to ensure a level playing field.

 

Spending habits among Malaysian visitors are also shifting. “We’ve observed that Malaysian tourists are spending less per person compared to previous years,” Dr. Sitthipong added. “It’s important that the government not only focuses on Chinese tourists, but also actively promotes tourism to the Malaysian market.”

 

To capitalise on sustained interest from Malaysian travellers, who consistently express demand to visit Thailand, Dr. Sitthipong proposed a number of targeted measures to help Thailand reach 5 million Malaysian visitors by the end of 2025:

 

1. Streamline cross-border car entry by enabling online pre-registration, improving efficiency and reducing border wait times.

 

2. Abolish after-hours entry fees currently charged at land borders.

 

3. Allocate budgets to the private sector to host large-scale “Mega Events” to draw tourists.

 

4. Boost tourist spending by introducing VAT refund stations at key border crossings.

 

5. Expand tourism promotions in Malaysia, with bilingual signage and marketing materials in Thai and English to improve accessibility.

 

“With proper government support and the right promotional strategies,” Dr. Sitthipong concluded, “we are confident that Malaysian tourist arrivals can be significantly increased beyond current levels.”

 

image.png  Adapted by Asean Now from Koaded 2025-06-20

 

 

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Posted
On 6/20/2025 at 4:47 AM, Georgealbert said:

The number of Malaysian tourists entering Thailand has now surpassed that of Chinese tourists,

:coffee1:

Posted

Lads from Singapore and KL (as well as other parts of Malaysia) pile into cars and take road trips up to Sadao for, er, cultural exchanges with the ladies of LOS.  

Malaysians love to have bus trips that last a few days.  You'll see the buses parked all over Hat Yai, for instance.

 

Posted

More Chinese than Malayans, that would (have been) a headline for me?

Was not aware.

Those Malayan border visits always counted for the high number of Malaysian tourists in the statistics.

Posted
1 hour ago, bendejo said:

Lads from Singapore and KL (as well as other parts of Malaysia) pile into cars and take road trips up to Sadao for, er, cultural exchanges with the ladies of LOS.  

Malaysians love to have bus trips that last a few days.  You'll see the buses parked all over Hat Yai, for instance.

 

The buses are a nightmare blocking roads while they load and unload at hotels, parking all over the place. They've banned them from street parking in town, and opened specific bus parking lots. Most weekends are busy in Hat Yai, it's a popular family city break, with the rising cost of living, for Malaysians its a foreign holiday close to home and not too expensive. 

 

Central Festival is another crazy spot for buses, every day lots of day trip shoppers from every kampong in Perlis and Kedah.

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