
More of Wales' Covid-19 rules could change over slot the next few weeks from being legal requirements to government advice, according to a Welsh minister.
Mick Antoniw said Wales was "moving to a stage where we are having increasing normality" but that ministers and officials would evaluate data ahead of the next review on 15 July.
All legal restrictions are expected to be lifted in England on 19 July.
And the SNP government is aiming to do the same in Scotland on 9 August.
With no date set in Wales, the Conservatives have accused the Welsh government of being "stuck in lockdown mode".
Responding to reports on Sunday that England will move into a period without legal restrictions, where the public will have to exercise "personal responsibility", Andrew RT Davies MS, the leader of the Conservatives in the Senedd, tweeted: "It's time for Welsh government to provide clarity on Wales' route to normality."
A further 535 people have tested positive for coronavirus, according to latest data published by Public Health Wales.
Counsel General Mr Antoniw told the BBC's Politics Wales programme the Welsh government's "current thinking is that we have obviously an increase in the level of infections, but we have less hospitalisation out of that".
"We want to maximise the vaccination rates still further, and then around the 15th or 16th of July, we'll have a review, and we'll consider what further easings can be taken within the data that we actually have," he said.