The number of Japanese and foreign tourists staying at hotels and other accommodation facilities in June exceeded pre-pandemic monthly levels for the first time, rising 1.0% from the same month in 2019, government data showed Monday.

There were around 46.3 million guests, according to preliminary data by the Japan Tourism Agency, with pandemic restrictions completely lifted and COVID-19's classification downgraded in May to a level equivalent to the seasonal flu.

The number of travelers had dropped drastically from February 2020 after initial cases of the coronavirus were confirmed in Japan.

But with the country's ending of pandemic border controls in April, the number of foreign guests in June rose 15.6 times from a year earlier to 9.43 million, reaching 98.4% of what it was in June 2019.

Meanwhile, domestic travelers took advantage of the government's travel subsidy program, which included discounts on accommodation fees.

The number of Japanese staying in hotels rose to 36.8 million, up 10.6% from a year earlier and 1.7% compared with June 2019.

The room occupancy rate in accommodation facilities was 54.2%, up 9.0 percentage points from a year earlier, but still shy of the 2019 level by 6.4 points.

The agency contacted 63,532 facilities across the country for the survey, with 40.5% of them providing valid responses.