Something remarkable is happening along the world’s longest undefended border. Parking lots at golf resorts near the Canadian line sit nearly empty. Hotel rooms in border towns go vacant night after night. The familiar parade of Quebec license plates heading toward Maine beaches never materialized this past summer. What was once one of the most dependable travel relationships on the planet has fractured in a way few predicted.
Canadians have traditionally been the most loyal visitors to the United States, making up roughly a quarter of all international arrivals. Yet throughout 2025, that relationship has taken a dramatic turn. The numbers tell a story that tourism officials south of the border are scrambling to address, while Canadians themselves are rethinking decades of vacation traditions.
The Numbers Are Staggering

Canadian residents made just 1.7 million return trips by motor vehicle back into their country from the U.S. in July 2025, a nearly 37% drop from the same month in 2024, according to Statistics Canada. This wasn’t a blip or seasonal anomaly. In November 2025, the number of Canadian residents returning from U.S. automobile trips dropped 28.6 percent, marking more than eleven consecutive months of continuous year-over-year declines.
Air travel hasn’t fared much better. Canadian-resident return trips by air continued to decline throughout the first five months of 2025, falling by 14.0% year over year in April and by 24.2% in May. When you look at the whole picture, Canadian residents made 22.9 million trips by car or plane in 2025, down from 31.9 million the year before.
Border Security Concerns Are Real

The political rhetoric wasn’t the only issue. Seven-in-10 (70%) say they would be uncomfortable travelling to the United States this winter, according to another Angus Reid survey. What’s driving this unease? The new interim rule – set to take effect April 11 – requires Canadians staying in the U.S. for longer than 30 days to register with the U.S. government.
Let’s be real, nobody enjoys added bureaucracy when they’re trying to relax. The rule mainly affects land border travellers who, if they register at the border, will be photographed, fingerprinted and charged $30 US each. For snowbirds in their sixties and seventies who’ve been making the same trip for decades, this felt like an unwelcome change to a cherished routine.
The Economic Impact Is Massive

Border communities are feeling the crunch most acutely. Laurie Trautman, director of the Border Policy Research Institute at Western Washington University in Bellingham, Washington, said “We’re getting decimated, our border communities in particular, by the lack of Canadian tourism”. Credit card spending in Kalispell has plunged 39% in 2025 compared to last year, a concerning shortfall for towns that depend heavily on cross-border visitors.
Specific Destinations Are Hurting

The pain isn’t evenly distributed across the United States. Las Vegas has seen an 18% decline in Canadian tourists in 2025. The city’s hotel bookings and flight arrivals have dropped as fewer Canadians make their way to Sin City. Old Orchard Beach, a popular Maine destination for Canadians, has reported a 50% drop in Canadian customers, particularly during the summer months.
Montana has been particularly hard hit. In Montana, Canadians accounted for nearly 80 per cent of international visitors in 2024 and contributed $170 million US to the state’s economy. In 2025, border crossings were down 19 per cent in the first 10 months of the year. Some tourism agencies in Montana even paused their Canadian marketing campaigns altogether, citing negative feedback and the futility of promoting travel during such tense times.
The Weak Loonie Made Things Worse

The Canadian dollar has declined against the US dollar since October 2024, mostly due to rising uncertainty around trade policies, according to the Bank of Canada. Here’s the thing about currency fluctuations: they have a sneaky way of making vacation decisions for you. When every restaurant meal, hotel night, and tank of gas suddenly costs thirty percent more, even the most loyal visitors start looking at alternatives.
Some worried that the tough political rhetoric – combined with a strong U.S. dollar – would damage an important source of U.S. tourism. It’s hard to say for sure which mattered more – the political tensions or the exchange rate – but both factors conspired to make American vacations less appealing on multiple fronts.
Canadians Are Traveling Elsewhere

This wasn’t simply a case of Canadians staying home. They’re traveling, just not to the United States. Statistics Canada reports an increase in domestic tourism, with Canadian residents taking more trips within Canada in 2025 compared with the same period in 2024. Of those respondents, the majority said they opted instead to either travel within their own province (44 per cent), or to another Canadian province (30 per cent), according to a Moneris survey.
Instead of going to the United States, “we’re seeing Canadian travel begin to lift toward Mexico, to the Caribbean, even toward Europe in recent data,” said Adam Sacks, president of Tourism Economics. Canadian vacation rental bookings in Europe are up 32% this summer. It seems many Canadians decided that if they’re going to spend extra money due to currency exchange, they might as well explore destinations they’ve never visited before.
<p>The post Canadians Are Skipping U.S. Travel – Here’s Why first appeared on Travelbinger.</p>