
The United States is experiencing a general decline in international tourism, resulting in an estimated economic loss of $29 billion in 2025 – a trend to which Canadians are making a significant contribution.
Canadians abandon the road to the U.S

According to Statistics Canada, the number of Canadians taking a car trip to the United States – the main mode of transport for Canadian tourists – fell by 33% in June compared with the same month last year. This follows a 38% drop in May.
Number of flights falls

The number of air passengers from Canada also fell by 22% year-on-year.
Sixth straight month of decline

June marks the sixth consecutive month of sharp declines in the number of Canadians visiting the United States.
Political and border tensions

Between the tariff war with the U.S., threats of annexation by U.S. President Donald Trump and the rise in detentions of Canadian tourists at the U.S. border, many Canadians have said goodbye to their getaways to their southern neighbors.
More than half of all Canadians change destination

According to a survey of over 1,500 adult Canadians conducted by marketing firm Léger, 56% of Canadians who were planning a visit to the U.S. this year ended up traveling elsewhere.
Tourism on the decline in both directions of the border

However, Americans also followed this trend: fewer American tourists travelled to Canada in June than a year earlier. In fact, the number of American visitors travelling by car fell by 10% in June, and by 8% in May.
A quarter of U.S. tourists are Canadians

According to the U.S. National Travel & Tourism Office (NTTO), Canadians made up around a quarter of all foreign visitors to the U.S. in 2024. They collectively spent $20.5 billion there. The U.S. Travel Association (USTA) warned in February that a decline of just 10% in Canadian tourism could jeopardize 140,000 American hotel and tourism jobs.
A 9% drop in international tourism by 2025

According to Tourism Economics, an independent arm of Oxford Economics, international tourism in the U.S. is set to decline by around 9% in 2025, with spending by international visitors expected to fall by 4.7% ($8.5 billion) year-on-year.