Published on November 22, 2025

Canadians aren’t crossing the border as freely as they used to—and it’s not because of weather or seasonal trends. Travel from Canada to the U.S. has fallen sharply in 2025, with airlines, car crossings and hotels in the U.S. reporting a noticeable drop in Canadian bookings and arrivals. The culprit behind the downturn? A mix of political frustration, economic pressure and border‑anxiety, influenced heavily by the rhetoric and policy moves of U.S. President Donald Trump.
Data compiled by Canada’s statistics agencies and U.S. travel associations show air and land travel from Canada to the U.S. down by more than 20‑30% in recent months compared to the same period last year. Car crossings dropped nearly 37% in July, while air return trips fell around 25% year‑over‑year. The decline is not just a minor blip—it reflects a sustained change in behaviour.
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Multiple factors are driving this shift in Canadian travel choices:
For the U.S., the decline in Canadian visitors is a blow. Canadians have historically been among the top international arrivals for many U.S. states—especially resort states like Florida and Arizona. A drop of this magnitude means lost spending, job impact in tourism‑heavy zones, and lower occupancy in hotels once filled by “snowbirds” from Canada.
For Canada, while the loss of outbound travel might hurt U.S. destinations, it may offer domestic opportunity. More Canadians staying home or picking alternative international destinations means domestic tourism operators may see increased demand. However, it also reflects underlying economic or sentiment weakness that isn’t good long‑term.
If you’re Canadian planning travel—or U.S.‑based and wondering how things will change—here are the practical implications:
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The Canada‑U.S. travel shift underscores how travel is connected to identity, diplomacy and economic relationships. For decades the cross‑border tourism flow was almost taken for granted. Canadians and Americans moved back and forth freely for leisure, shopping and visiting family. The recent decline is not simply a change in holiday habits—it reflects a deeper shift in how Canadians view the U.S., how business‑linkages operate and how tourism markets respond to diplomatic climate.
In some provinces, the notion of a travel boycott or at least travel hesitation is surfacing. Protest over trade tariffs or rhetoric is translating into economic behaviour. Campaigns to “Buy Canadian” or “Visit Canada” are also gaining momentum, whether officially or socially.
The decline in Canadian travel to the U.S. this year is a clear signal: travel doesn’t exist in isolation from politics, economics or national sentiment. For Canadians and Americans alike, the era when unlimited cross‑border holiday movement was automatic may be ending—or at least transforming.
If you’re planning a trip, either way, pay attention. Destination choice, currency, border policy and institutional trust matter more now than they used to. For many Canadians, the U.S. holiday is still possible—but it’s being weighed in new terms. And for U.S. destinations, welcoming Canadians may mean more than open doors—it means addressing the reasons they aren’t coming.
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Saturday, November 22, 2025
Saturday, November 22, 2025
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Saturday, November 22, 2025
Saturday, November 22, 2025