Canadian Visitors To U.S. Plummet 33% In June—Sixth Straight Month Of Steep Declines
CANADA, JUL 9 – Airlines reduce Canada-U.S. routes as 62% of European leisure travellers avoid the U.S., boosting demand for Canadian and European travel, Toronto Pearson expects over 11 million passengers.
- Canadian visitors to the U.S. dropped 33% in June 2025, marking the sixth straight month of steep declines primarily at road border crossings.
- This decrease occurred after the Trump administration introduced a 25% tariff on goods imported from both Canada and Mexico, alongside escalating political tensions between the nations.
- Flight Centre and Kayak reported increased domestic travel interest in Canada, with rising bookings and flight searches, while Europeans express reduced willingness to visit the U.S. due to its political climate.
- Amra Durakovic highlighted that the most popular travel spots include London, Paris, and Dublin, while surveys reveal that 87% of respondents find Canada an attractive destination in its own right.
- The continued drop in Canadian travel to the U.S. could cost American tourism up to $12.5 billion in losses, contributing to a broader $29 billion projected international tourism decline in 2025.
21 Articles
21 Articles
Indignation at Donald Trump's trade war was not feigned, and the drastic decline in the number of Canadians returning from the United States by car shows this: in June 2025, 33% fewer Canadian residents crossed the border than a year earlier.

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