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Canadians Are Quietly Boycotting America – and It’s Reshaping Tourism on Both Sides of the Border

Anderson Liam
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For decades, Canadian travel to the United States felt almost automatic: ski trips to Lake Placid, baseball weekends in Baltimore, casual drives across the border to shorten long routes. But that familiar rhythm is breaking down. Thousands of Canadians – from retirees to ordinary families – are choosing to stay home, turning personal protest into a trend powerful enough to reshape North American tourism.

At NewsTrackerToday, we see this not as a temporary dip, but as a structural shift driven not by logistics, but by politics.

For 62-year-old Kristie Gammon of Nova Scotia, who once crossed into the U.S. every couple of years, the decision came with unexpected clarity. This year, she couldn’t bring herself to cross the border even to save 18 hours of driving time. For her – and many others – the issue is not convenience, but disapproval of President Donald Trump’s policies: tariffs on Canadian goods, harsh rhetoric toward Ottawa, and public comments implying Canada could become the “51st state.”

Those sentiments are rapidly becoming mainstream. October marked the tenth consecutive month of decline: Canadian travel to the U.S. fell nearly 24 percent, and car trips dropped more than 30 percent year over year. For an economy where Canadians historically accounted for a quarter of all foreign visitors and spent more than 20 billion dollars annually, the impact is tangible.

Economic analyst Ethan Cole of NewsTrackerToday notes that “the significance lies not in the magnitude of the drop, but in its persistence. When consumer behavior shifts collectively, it becomes a signal of trust – or distrust – between nations.”

The U.S. tariffs – alongside Canada’s frustration with Washington’s confrontational rhetoric – have created an atmosphere where tourism now reflects geopolitical sentiment. This is more than a dip in travel; it’s a silent vote.

Canada currently faces 35 percent tariffs on various goods, as well as sector-specific duties targeting steel and autos. Trade talks collapsed last month after Trump reacted angrily to an anti-tariff ad from Ontario that featured Ronald Reagan. His repeated comments suggesting Canada should become an additional U.S. state only deepened resentment.

Sophie Leclerc, technology and society analyst at NewsTrackerToday, emphasizes that “cross-border tensions rarely stay at the level of official policy. They leak into culture, personal decisions, and everyday behavior. Tourism is always the first sector to feel that shift.”

Some U.S. cities are scrambling to offset the decline. Kalispell, Montana, gateway to Glacier National Park, launched a “Canadian Welcome Pass” offering discounts for visitors who cross the border. These gestures help at the margins, but they rarely sway those who now view their travel choices as a political statement.

Meanwhile, Canada is benefitting in unexpected ways. Domestic tourism surged to record levels: from May to August 2025, the sector generated 59 billion Canadian dollars – 6 percent more than a year earlier. The boom comes not only from principle-driven choices but also from renewed interest in regional destinations.

Even Canada’s “snowbirds” – retirees who escape to Florida for winter – are changing long-standing habits. Just 10 percent plan U.S. trips this year, a stunning 66 percent drop. Some are even selling their American homes.

Many Canadians say they’re open to returning to the U.S., but not until the tone of cross-border relations improves. For them, it’s not a travel decision – it’s about respect. And even if tariffs soften, behavioral change tends to outlast political cycles.

We at News Tracker Today observe a critical pattern emerging: tourism is becoming a sentiment index of bilateral relations. Canadians no longer view U.S. travel as the default. This mindset could persist throughout Trump’s term.

Canadian-American tourism now mirrors not economics, but geopolitics. As long as the atmosphere remains strained, industries on both sides must adjust to a new reality. Recovery will depend on whether political leaders can reduce the toxicity in cross-border relations and restore the trust that once seemed unshakeable.

At NewsTrackerToday, we conclude that this trend goes far beyond leisure travel. We are witnessing a rare moment when political climate literally reshapes the physical movement of people – and unless the tone shifts meaningfully, the map of North American tourism may not return to its old routes anytime soon.

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