Zipair's budget Vancouver-Tokyo flights are nearly sold out for March - Action News
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British Columbia

Zipair's budget Vancouver-Tokyo flights are nearly sold out for March

Zipair announced the budget flightfrom Vancouver to Tokyo last December. A look at theirwebsite showsdemand for the flight is high with nearly all of the outbound flights in March booked out as of Jan. 20.

Zipair flight from YVR to Narita airport costs around half as much as larger carriers like Air Canada

An airplane with the words 'Zipair' along its side.
A Zipair plane is shown in this undated photo. The Japanese low-cost carrier is offering a Vancouver to Tokyo flight that a tourism expert says may set a high bar for other carriers. (Zipair)

A low-cost carrier offering new cheap flightsfrom Vancouver to Tokyo is turning heads among B.C. travellers, with tickets for its first month of operations nearly sold out.

Zipair announced the budget flightfrom Vancouver-Tokyo Narita airporton Dec. 26, offering a round trip at around $700 US ($942 Cdn) for an economy seat where larger carrierslike Japan Airlines of which Zipair is a subsidiary and Air Canadatypically chargemore than double that price.

Passengers are expected to pay forother services,including food and check-in luggage.Economy seats make up most of the flight; with a few hundred dollars more, passengers can access to "full flat seats" that allow them to recline.

"Having a low-cost alternative, I think it's going to really drum up interest for inbound tourism into Japan," said David Tikkanen, head of the tourism marketing program at the B.C. Institute of Technology.

"Hopefully, [the] Japanese market, they are going to want to come and check out Vancouver as well."

Statistics from the Japan Tourism Agency show that the country's tourism sector saw a major rebound in 2023 after three years of pandemic-induced slowdown.

Around 25 million people visited Japan last year, according to preliminary figures not far from the31.8 million people who visited in 2019, the year the country saw the most tourists on record.

An East Asian man points to a logo reading 'Zipair Tokyo'.
ZIPAIR Tokyo President Shingo Nishida poses for a photograph during a news conference in Tokyo on March 8, 2019. (Maki Shiraki/Reuters)

In a Decemberstatement, Zipair president Shingo Nishida said there was a "growing travel demand" among those seeking to travelbetween Vancouver and Tokyo.

"We sincerely look forward to welcoming customers in Canada to take advantage of our service, as this route will provide a valuable link for commercial and cultural exchange between the two countries," Nishidasaid.

The 'secret sauce'?

Zipair's Vancouver-Tokyo flighthasgenerated a lot of buzz on social mediasinceits announcement, with flights set to run three days a week starting March 13.

A look at theirwebsite showsdemand for the flight is already high, with nearly all of the outbound flights from Vancouver in March booked out as of Jan. 20.

Tikkanen thinks Zipair's "secret sauce" may be its seat upgrade for thefull-flat bed.

He saysa comfortable, bed-like seat on a 10-hour flight, even withoutfood or other services, would be quite a competitive offering against other carriers.

Upgradingto a full-flat bed on Zipair's Vancouver-Tokyo flight costsaround a few hundred dollars more than an economy ticket on a carrier like Air Canada, according to Tikkanen.

He says he thinks other carriers could dip their toes into the budget long-haul flight space given the overwhelming interest in Zipair's offering.

"Zip has kind of stripped out everything and you're just getting the seat, which is probably what a lot of us just want," he said.

'Travel moment'

Tikkanensays Vancouver has historically had a strong tourism link with Japan since the 1980s.

"Japan's kind of having a bit of a travel moment right now," Tikkanensaid, referring to the rise in visitors toJapan from Canada following the easing of pandemic restrictions."A lot of younger people are really interested in travelling to Japan."

A man walks past a giant East Asian gate located in a water body, with a skyline off in the distance.
A man walks past the Grand Torii Gate of the world cultural heritage Itsukushima Shinto Shrine, illuminated at night as the tide comes in, in Hatsukaichi City on Miyajima Island, Hiroshima. With the uptick in travel to Japan has come concerns of overtourism. (Tomohiro Ohsumi/AP Content Services for Hiroshima Tourism Association)

He adds thatZipair's low-costVancouver-Tokyo route will alsoget a lot of interest from the Japanese diaspora in the province.

B.C. historically has alarge Japanese Canadian population, with the 2021 census showing there are around 44,000 people of Japanese origin in the province.

CBC News has reached out to theGreater Vancouver Japanese Canadian Citizens' Association for this story.