Canadians changing their travel plans
Recent surveys show a significant shift in Canadian travel behaviour when it comes to visiting the United States:
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One poll found that over 65% of Canadians said they have changed their travel plans this year to avoid travelling to the U.S. — with ~35.7% cancelling their trips completely, and ~29.5% choosing a different country instead.
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Another survey reported that among Canadians who had planned a U.S. trip, 56% had either cancelled or modified it.
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A February 2025 poll showed that 48% of Canadians said they were “less likely” to visit the U.S. this year compared to last.
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According to the Travel Health Insurance Association (THIA), about 70% of Canadians intend to avoid travel to the U.S. this year.
Actual travel numbers backing the shift
It isn’t just intentions — the data show real declines in travel:
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For April 2025, return trips of Canadian residents from the U.S. by vehicle dropped ~35.2% compared with April 2024; by air they dropped ~19.9%.
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In May 2025, automobile return trips from the U.S. dropped ~38.1% year-over-year.
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For August 2025, Canadian-resident return trips to the U.S. were down ~29.7% overall; vehicle trips fell ~32.6%.
Why are Canadians avoiding U.S. travel?
The various sources point to a mix of factors:
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Political tensions and trade disputes between Canada and the U.S. — for example, Canadians citing tariffs and a sense of being treated unfairly.
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A weak Canadian dollar vs. the U.S. dollar making travel to the U.S. more expensive.
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A preference for alternatives: more Canadians are choosing to travel domestically (within Canada) or to other international destinations instead of the U.S.
What this means
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The U.S., which has historically been the top destination for Canadians travelling abroad, is seeing a noticeable pull-back in Canadian visitors. For example: in 2024 Canadian-resident trips to the U.S. totaled around 39 million, representing ~75% of all Canadian-resident travel abroad.
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For U.S. tourism and border-economies that count on Canadian visitors, the drop is significant — both in visitor numbers and likely in spending.
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For Canada, this means more of the tourism “dollar” may stay at home or go to other destinations — which could benefit domestic travel sectors.
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For travellers: if you were planning to go to the U.S., this might be a good time to reassess exchange rates, border conditions, and perhaps compare alternatives.