Canadian leisure travel to U.S. down 40% in February, Flight Centre says | Globalnews.ca

May Be Interested In:King Charles admitted to hospital amid cancer battle


Tariff and annexation threats by U.S. President Donald Trump combined with a weak Canadian dollar have Canadians crossing the United States off their list of travel destinations.

Flight Centre Canada spokesperson Amra Durakovic said interest in U.S. travel began to wane in November. That trend saw explosive growth in February, with leisure travel bookings to the U.S. plunging 40 per cent year over year.


Click to play video: '‘Pissed off’: B.C. premier delivers fiery message to Americans over Trump tariffs'


‘Pissed off’: B.C. premier delivers fiery message to Americans over Trump tariffs


“A lot of that has to do with the U.S. administration’s tariffs that were announced at the beginning of February, but also Prime Minister Trudeau encouraging Canadians not to travel to the U.S.,” Durakovic said.

Story continues below advertisement

“That’s quite a significant drop.”

B.C.-based Travel Best Bets told Global News it had seen a similar trend.

Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day.

Get daily National news

Get the day’s top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day.

“Canadians are a really proud country and they’re angry and they have a big number of dollars to spend and they don’t want to be spending them in the U.S. right now,” Travel Best Bet president Claire Newell said.


Click to play video: '‘Pissed off’: B.C. premier delivers fiery message to Americans over Trump tariffs'


‘Pissed off’: B.C. premier delivers fiery message to Americans over Trump tariffs


Canadians appear to be eschewing more than just air travel.

Recent data from Cascade Gateway, which also provides border wait times, found a drop of about 30 per cent in southbound travel at Surrey’s Peace Arch border crossing year over year in February.

And that was before the federal government applied a new surtax on items brought back into Canada from across the U.S. border.

Story continues below advertisement

Newell said Canadians have been looking further and further afield for vacation destinations.


Click to play video: 'Canadian coffee shops renaming the Americano as ‘Canadiano’ amid U.S. tariff dispute'


Canadian coffee shops renaming the Americano as ‘Canadiano’ amid U.S. tariff dispute


“They are going places that are anywhere but the U.S., but the most interest we are seeing is in places like Vietnam, Mexico, Portugal, eastern Europe so hungry, Poland, Czech Republic.

“All of these places have one thing in common: they are not the U.S. Another thing, the dollar goes a lot farther.”

Durakovic said there has also been a big uptick in interest in so-called “fly-and-drive” vacations, particularly to Canada’s East Coast, with car rentals and bus tours for the summer already filling up.

Those trends could be bad news for the U.S. tourism industry.

According to the U.S. Travel Association Canadians made 20.4 million visits south of the border in 2024, shelling out US$20.5 billion.

Story continues below advertisement

The association estimated just a 10-per cent drop in Canadian travel would cost the industry US$2.1 billion and 14,000 jobs.


&copy 2025 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.



share Share facebook pinterest whatsapp x print

Similar Content

Outside a brick building, under a blue sky with mountains in the background, a man in a grey shirt and jeans holding a hat stands in front of a group of people seated in folding chairs.
Faith organizations have a complex relationship to disaster relief
The influencer lawsuit that could change the industry
The influencer lawsuit that could change the industry
Liverpool Legends vs Chelsea Legends: Charity match — LIVE
Liverpool Legends vs Chelsea Legends: Charity match — LIVE
England captain Jos Buttler in a group huddle before an international match
England-Afghanistan boycott calls: MP says players have ‘power’ to refuse to play Champions Trophy match
datacenter
Meta wants everyone to know that it, too, is investing a lot in AI
Lancaster baby's death due to midwives' gross failures, coroner rules
Lancaster baby’s death due to midwives’ gross failures, coroner rules
From the Ground Up: Authentic News as It Happens | © 2025 | Daily News