
More American travellers drove to Canada in July than Canadians did to the United States, according to a new report by Statistics Canada . This is the first time such a reversal has taken place since before the COVID-19 pandemic.
The dramatic decline of Canadians travelling to the U.S. was sparked last year, with U.S. President Donald Trump’s heated rhetoric about Canada becoming the 51st state that led to an ongoing trade war and lingering tension between the two countries.
The data for last month shows that 1.8 million American residents drove to Canada, compared to the 1.7 million Canadian residents who made a return trip from the U.S. by car.
Canadian road trips to U.S. plunge for seventh month as boycott continues
Both countries saw a decline at land border crossings last month. For Americans driving to Canada, there was a slight dip of 7.4 per cent compared to the same month last year. It was also the sixth consecutive month of year-over-year declines.
However, the decline was much steeper for Canadians returning from the U.S. this July compared to the previous year, at nearly 37 per cent. Last month marked the seventh consecutive month of year-over-year declines, StatCan said.
“In 2024, Canadian-resident trips to the United States totalled 39 million, representing 75 per cent of all Canadian-resident travel abroad,” according to another StatCan report published earlier this summer about travel to the U.S. “However, recent data on foreign travel suggest that Canadians’ travel sentiment toward their southern neighbour has been shifting in early 2025.”

Although the data reflects a “notable change in travel patterns,” StatCan said it is “unclear whether the change is temporary or part of a more permanent shift.”
As for air travel, the number of non-resident visitors who flew to Canada increased in July. There were 1.4 million of them — up by just over 3 per cent since the same time last year. While the bump was largely due to residents who came from overseas (up 5.6 per cent this year), American travellers were also up by just under 1 per cent.
The highest number of U.S.-resident arrivals by air was 31,600 Americans on July 3, before the Independence Day long weekend in the U.S.
Meanwhile, the number of Canadians returning home from abroad by air last month was down by 5.3 per cent compared to the previous year. In particular, Canadians flying back from the U.S. also decreased by nearly 26 per cent since the same time last year.
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