U.S. Tourism Faces US$5.7 B Loss as Canadians Curtail Travel
In 2025, the U.S. tourism industry is bracing for a significant setback as travel from Canada plummets. According to industry data, Americans could lose around US$5.7 billion in tourism spending as Canadians increasingly stay home or travel elsewhere.
A dramatic decline

Returns by Canadian residents from the U.S. are down sharply. For example:
- Air return trips from the U.S. declined by 27 % year-over-year in one recent month.
- Land crossings dropped even more steeply, with automobile return trips down 35 % in the same timeframe.
- More broadly, the first half of 2025 saw Canadian outbound travel to the U.S. decline by as much as 17.7 %, while travel to overseas destinations rose.
Why are Canadians travelling less to the U.S.?
Several factors are contributing to this shift:
- A weaker Canadian dollar reduces purchasing power for U.S. travel.
- Political and border-related tensions have prompted some Canadians to reconsider travel to the U.S.
- The strong trend toward overseas travel means many Canadians are opting for destinations beyond the U.S.
Impact on the U.S. tourism industry
The drop in Canadian visitors is hitting border-state economies and U.S. tourism broadly. Cities that traditionally draw large numbers of Canadian travellers are seeing lower hotel bookings, reduced retail spending, and fewer day-trips across the border.
Canadian travellers head elsewhere
With U.S. travel waning, Canadians are redirecting their travel dollars:
- Travel to Europe, the Caribbean, Mexico and other overseas destinations has risen.
- Domestic travel within Canada is also seeing a boost as Canadians explore their own country instead of going south.
What does this mean going forward?
For U.S. tourism, the Canadian drop is a red flag: a loyal and high-spending visitor base is receding. For Canadian travellers and the travel industry, the trend signals a lasting shift in preferences and travel patterns.
While the full effects will play out over time, the data to date suggest the cross-border travel relationship between Canada and the U.S. is undergoing meaningful change.
