Close Menu
  • Home
  • Markets
    • Earnings
  • Banks
    • Crypto
    • Investing
  • Business
    • Retail
  • industry
    • Finance
    • Energy
    • Real Estate
  • Politics
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook LinkedIn
Financial Market News
Subscribe Now
  • Home
  • Markets
    • Earnings
  • Banks
    • Crypto
    • Investing
  • Business
    • Retail
  • industry
    • Finance
    • Energy
    • Real Estate
  • Politics
Financial Market News
You are at:Home»Markets»Spring break shakeup? Canadians taking fewer trips to the U.S., StatsCan
Markets

Spring break shakeup? Canadians taking fewer trips to the U.S., StatsCan

March 10, 20253 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
OLOGI Ad 2


Colin Bykowski usually crosses the Canada-U.S. border twice a month to buy groceries from Trader Joe’s and toys for his son at Target. The last time he made the trip was a month ago — and he doesn’t know when the next time will be.

“It’s funny…. This week we were planning on going, but we decided to make a different decision,” said Bykowski, who was shopping in Tsawwassen, B.C., just north of the border shared with Point Roberts, Wash.

“With what’s going on, we’re being a little bit more conscious with our buying decisions, and we’ll see going forward.”

Bykowski isn’t the only Canadian resident cutting back on visits to the United States. Data released by Statistics Canada on Monday shows that the number of return trips among Canadians travelling by car to the U.S. declined significantly in February, down 23 per cent compared with a year earlier.

Return trips made by air also dropped a smidge, declining 2.4 per cent on a yearly basis.

The figures come after weeks of stories from Canadians who opted to change or cancel a trip to the U.S. on account of President Donald Trump’s on-again, off-again tariffs against Canada: March break trips to Myrtle Beach, S.C., were rerouted to Mexico, snowbirds reconsidered their yearly vacations to Florida and anniversary trips to Las Vegas were scrapped.

Travellers ‘explicitly’ asking not to go to U.S., says agent

One Canadian travel agency even reported that leisure bookings to the U.S. (meaning travel for pleasure, not business) took a swan dive in February, plummeting 40 per cent compared with the same month last year.

The agency, Flight Centre Travel Group, noted that Canadians had not stopped travelling completely but rather were looking to travel to locations outside the U.S.

Cars line up at a border crossing
Traffic backs up at the border station as motorists leave Emerson, Man., for the United States at the crossing in Pembina, N.D., in this July 2018 photo. (David Zalubowski/The Associated Press)

McKenzie McMillan, a travel consultant at the Travel Group in Vancouver, told CBC News that new bookings or requests for travel to the U.S. have almost completely evaporated this month compared with the same period a year ago. 

  • Are you thinking of travelling within Canada now in light of the trade war with the U.S.? We want to hear about your plans at ask@cbc.ca

He estimates, conservatively, that there’s been an 80 per cent decline in demand within his own agency during a time when people are usually booking last-minute trips for spring break or planning ahead on summer vacations.

“We’re not seeing any of that right now. In fact, the majority of our travel that we’re seeing now are requests coming in [from] clients that have explicitly said they do not want to go to the United States,” McMillan said.

Some clients are looking to travel domestically instead, he said, with eastern Canadians looking to head west, and western Canadians booking trips east. And some are still going forth with trips down south, he said.

“But future…



Read More: Spring break shakeup? Canadians taking fewer trips to the U.S., StatsCan

TGC Banner 1
break Canadians shakeup spring StatsCan trips
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleEvers discusses investing in the UW System
Next Article Trump made the stock market a marker of success. Now he’s hedging as market

Related Posts

Epic Games to lay off more than 1,000 employees as Fortnite usage drops

March 25, 2026

Some U.S. car buyers envy what they cannot have — affordable Chinese EVs

March 24, 2026

Oil prices fall after Trump postpones Iran strikes

March 23, 2026

Customers complain about long wait times, multiple calls to resolve issues

March 22, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Energy News

Kuwait says Hormuz closure will trigger domino effect across the world

Texas leads nation in solar power installation, report finds – Houston

The economy has Strait of Hormuz deadline for Trump: Two weeks

Amid energy market turmoil, the people taking power into their own hands

Banks News

The Shadow of Stablecoin Regulation Looms, Crypto-Related Stocks Suffer

Glia Wins AI Excellence Award in Banking and Financial Services Category

Down 12% This Year, Nubank Plans a ‘100b Pivot’ And Investors Are Taking

JPMorgan Chase Stock Faces Headwinds Ahead of Earnings

Real Estate News

SMBC Arm, Aravest Get $165 Million for APAC Real Estate Credit

Manhattan Real Estate Report: Is this the ”It’s Always SOMETHING” moment

License EDU Launches Real Estate Continuing Education Courses in Texas

UNL Releases Preliminary Farm Real Estate Market Survey Results for

© 2026 finmar.news

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.