The event kicks off a series of promotions in Beijing, Chongqing, and Chengdu to mark the 75th anniversary of Vietnam - China diplomatic relations (1950-2025) and the Year of Vietnam - China Humanistic Exchange 2025. It aims to strengthen bilateral friendship, boost cultural and tourism cooperation, increase tourist exchanges, connect businesses, and showcase Vietnam as a welcoming country to Chinese visitors.

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Performing traditional arts at the event (Photo: VNAT)

VNAT Director General Nguyen Trung Khanh highlighted the long-standing tourism and cultural cooperation between the two countries. He noted that the 2023-2027 Cooperation Plan on Culture and Tourism, signed during then Vietnamese General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong’s visit to China in 2022, provides a comprehensive, oriented and intensive cooperation framework. Since 2018, annual ministerial meetings and regular bilateral activities have helped Vietnam - China tourism cooperation become one of the highlights in the comprehensive cooperation between the two countries.

Khanh emphasized that both sides will continue ministerial-level exchanges, jointly promote sustainable tourism, organize destination events, and support business, media, and expert exchanges. Vietnam seeks cooperation on service quality, infrastructure, human resources, and digital transformation to create a smart, safe, and sustainable tourism environment. VNAT also aims to develop resort, golf, cultural, culinary, and MICE tourism to further increase bilateral tourist flows, he added.

Counsellor Ninh Thanh Cong at the Vietnamese Embassy in China praised the program for introducing Vietnam’s tourism policies and attractions, expressing confidence that tourism cooperation between the two nations will continue to recover and thrive.

Deputy Director-General of the Beijing Municipal Bureau of Culture and Tourism Zheng Fang noted that recent multi-sector cooperation has made cultural and tourism exchanges a key bridge for mutual understanding and strengthening traditional friendship. Vietnam’s rich history, culture, landscapes, and customs have drawn growing numbers of Chinese visitors, and she hoped the event would further boost cooperation between Beijing and Vietnamese localities.

China remains Vietnam’s top outbound tourist market, with over 5.8 million visitors annually, accounting for around 30 % of international arrivals to Vietnam. In 2024, nearly 3.74 million Chinese tourists visited Vietnam, recovering over 64 % of pre-COVID levels, with nearly 3.9 million arrivals in the first nine months of this year.

Vietnam is also among the top five overseas markets sending tourists to China, highlighting strong mutual demand and the potential for further tourism development.

Source: VNA