
Canada's Travel Boycott Of U.S. Escalates: Could Mean $6 Billion Loss
Three times as many Canadians are staying away from the U.S. than the national travel industry first predicted—setting up a potential $6 billion economic loss this year.
The Blue Water Bridges between the cities of Port Huron, Michigan and Sarnia, Ontario are seeing ... More fewer Canadians crossing these days.
Last month, the number of Canadians taking road trips into the U.S.—representing the majority of Canadians who visit—dropped by 32% compared to March 2024, according to new data from Statistics Canada.
There was also a 13.5% decline in air travelers from Canada compared to March 2024.
It was the third consecutive month of steep decline of inbound Canadian car travel, following a 23% year-over-year drop in car travel and a 2.4% drop in air travel to the U.S. in February, after President Donald Trump announced tariffs and began referring to Canada as 'the 51st state.'
The U.S. Travel Association (USTA) warned in February that even a 10% reduction in Canadian inbound tourism could translate to $2.1 billion in lost spending and 140,000 jobs jeopardized in the hospitality and related sectors.
Using the USTA's calculations, a sustained decline of more than 30% in Canadian visitors would translate to more than $6 billion in losses to the U.S. economy in 2025.
There was also a 17% drop in inbound travel from Western Europe to the U.S. last month compared to March 2024, according to preliminary data released last week by the National Travel and Tourism Office (NTTO), the agency within the U.S. Commerce Department that tracks tourism statistics.
Following two years of strong growth in inbound tourism, the U.S. is seeing a precipitous drop in international visitors so far in 2025. Canadians comprise the single largest cohort of foreign inbound tourists to the U.S., accounting for about a quarter of all foreign visitors, according to the U.S. National Travel and Tourism Office (NTTO). The next biggest market is Mexico, which sent 23% fewer air travelers to the U.S. in March compared to the same month last year. March inbound tourism volume also dropped year over year from the Caribbean (down 26%), Central America (down 24%), South America (down 11%), Africa (down 10%), Oceania (down 8%) and Asia (down 1%), according to NTTO's data.
$20.5 billion. That's how much Canadian travelers spent in the U.S. in 2024. To put that number into perspective, it's nearly double the $10.4 billion that Americans spent at McDonald's last year.
'In Canada, we have seen a significant drop-off in bookings,' Delta president Glenn Hallenstein told investors last week on the company's first-quarter earnings call. In response to flagging demand, airlines like Delta and United are paring back on their Canada-U.S. flights. Notably, United Airlines has a major partnership with Air Canada, which reduced its April 2025 capacity on Canada-U.S. routes by more than 63,000 seats, per data from Visual Approach Analytics. Delta has a partnership with the Canadian airline WestJet, which reduced its capacity this month by nearly 12,000 seats. An additional 30,000 seats were collectively cut in April by Canadian carriers Flair Airlines and Air Transat. The hit comes at a time when airlines are already reeling from declining domestic demand due to the Trump administration's tariffs.
Whether the Canadian travel boycott will escalate further heading into the peak summer travel season. There are already signs of significant decline in flight bookings into June. An analysis by Cirium found that third-party flight bookings made in the first quarter 2025 for travel in April through June are down by 21% from major Canadian cities to key U.S. destinations. 'It's not the full picture, of course,' noted the study's authors. 'Only the airlines have the full view of what the actual decline looks like.'
Trump's Tariffs Sent U.S. Airline Bookings Into A Tailspin, New Data Show (Forbes)

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


UPI
an hour ago
- UPI
Sen. Rand Paul 'not an absolute no' on budget bill
Sen. Rand Paul, R-KY, speaks during a Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee hearing on Martin Makary's nomination to be Commissioner of the Food and Drugs Administration at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., in March. File photo by Bonnie Cash/UPI | License Photo June 15 (UPI) -- Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., said Sunday that he is "not an absolute no" on the Trump administration's House-passed budget reconciliation bill, which threatens cuts to social services and would increase the national spending deficit. "I talked to the president last evening after the parade, and we're trying to get to a better place in our conversations," Paul said on NBC News' Meet the Press Sunday. "And I've let him know that I'm not an absolute no." Paul has been a leading critic of the bill in its current form, along with a handful of other Republicans skeptical of the scope of the cuts. A report from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office report that shows that the measure would come at the expense of lower income Americans to benefit higher earners. "I don't have as much trouble with the tax cuts," Paul continued. "I think there should be more spending cuts, but if they want my vote, they'll have to negotiate," specifically citing his opposition to raising the debt ceiling by trillions of dollars. In its current form, the measure would increase the national deficit by $2.4 trillion over 10 years. Lawmakers are trying to pass the bill through a reconciliation process that only requires a simple majority for passage. Paul said last week that tensions have come to the fore between him and his GOP colleagues, and that he was "uninvited" to a White House picnic that is typically attended by lawmakers and their families. He called the move "petty vindictiveness," and said he felt the White House was trying to "punish" him for his opposition to the bill as it stands. President Donald Trump said on his social media platform that "of course" Paul was invited to the picnic. Republicans can only afford to lose three votes pending a tie breaking vote by Vice President JD Vance. The measure currently awaits action in the Senate, where Republicans hold 53 seats. The body has taken a more conservative approach in the negotiations than the House.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Exclusive-US Export-Import Bank considers $120 million loan for Greenland rare earths project
By Ernest Scheyder (Reuters) -Critical Metals Corp has received a letter of interest from the U.S. Export-Import Bank (EXIM) for a loan worth up to $120 million to fund the company's Tanbreez rare earths mine in Greenland, in what would be the Trump administration's first overseas investment in a mining project. The loan, if approved, would boost U.S. access to minerals increasingly at the center of global economic trade and help offset the country's reliance on market leader China. It also comes after President Donald Trump openly mused earlier this year about acquiring the Danish island territory, an overture that has been repeatedly rejected. In a letter dated June 12 and reviewed by Reuters, New York-based Critical Metals has met initial requirements to apply for the $120 million EXIM loan and, if approved, would have a 15-year repayment term, longer than the company likely would have with private financing. The project would have to be "well-capitalized with sufficient equity from strategic investors" to receive the loan, the letter said. EXIM, which acts as the U.S. government's export credit agency, said in the letter that Critical Metals qualifies for a loan program designed to support companies that compete with China. The Tanbreez project is expected to cost $290 million and the EXIM funds would be used to fund technical work and get the mine to initial production by 2026. Once fully operational, the mine is expected to produce 85,000 metric tons per year of a rare earths concentrate and two minor metals. "This funding package is expected to unlock significant value for our project and our stakeholders," said Tony Sage, the company's CEO. Representatives for EXIM were not immediately available to comment. The move is the latest in a series of supportive actions by Washington toward the Tanbreez deposit and Greenland's mining sector. Reuters reported in January that former President Joe Biden's administration had successfully lobbied privately held Tanbreez Mining not to sell to a Chinese developer and instead sell to Critical Metals. Biden officials were visiting Nuuk as recently as last November trying to woo additional private investment in the island. Trump sent Vice President JD Vance to the island in March. The island's mining sector has developed slowly in recent years, hindered by limited investor interest, bureaucratic challenges and environmental concerns. Currently, only two small mines are in operation. Rare earths have strong magnetic properties that make them critical to high-tech industries ranging from electric vehicles to missile systems. Their necessity has given rise to intense competition as Western countries try to lessen their dependence on China's near-total control of their extraction and processing. Beijing in April put export restrictions on rare earths as part of its trade spat with Trump. The two countries earlier this month reached a truce, although Beijing's control of the sector has exacerbated the West's over-reliance and sparked a global hunt for fresh supplies. Despite the loan potential, Critical Metals would still have to either build a processing facility or find an existing site with spare capacity. The company told Reuters that its goal is to process the material inside the U.S., a goal the EXIM loan would make more achievable. Last year, Critical Metals had applied for funding to develop a processing facility from the U.S. Department of Defense, but the review process stalled ahead of Trump's January inauguration. For the EXIM loan's additional funding requirements, Critical Metals said it is considering offtake agreements, royalty streams and funding from other U.S. governmental agencies. Critical Metals told Reuters earlier this year that it has held supply talks with defense contractor Lockheed Martin, among others. Critical Metals' 10th-largest investor is brokerage firm Cantor Fitzgerald, which was formerly led by Howard Lutnick before he joined Trump's cabinet as secretary of the U.S. Commerce Department. Sage told Reuters in January he had never met or talked to Lutnick, but acknowledged Cantor's investment was a positive for his company. EXIM last year extended a letter of interest to Perpetua Resources for a loan worth up to $1.8 billion for its antimony and gold mine in Idaho. Error while retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Grant Cardone Says 'Consumer Debt Makes Slaves.' It Stops You From Investing, Costs You More, And Chains You To Stress
Real estate mogul Grant Cardone has made his stance on consumer debt crystal clear. In a recent post on X, the real estate mogul and motivational speaker warned that debt doesn't just slow people down financially—it traps them. 'Consumer debt makes slaves!' Cardone wrote. He broke it down into five main consequences: 'Can't invest, can't keep up, pay extra for everything, can't build net worth, never live stress free.' Don't Miss: Maker of the $60,000 foldable home has 3 factory buildings, 600+ houses built, and big plans to solve housing — Peter Thiel turned $1,700 into $5 billion—now accredited investors are eyeing this software company with similar breakout potential. Learn how you can Cardone's post reflects a growing concern in the U.S. as consumer debt keeps climbing. According to LendingTree (NASDAQ:TREE), Americans owed a record $251 billion in personal loan debt as of the fourth quarter of 2024. That's a $6 billion jump from the year before. And it's not just the total amount. TransUnion (NYSE:TRU) data shows that the number of Americans with personal loans hit 24.5 million, up from 23.5 million a year earlier. While personal loan debt still makes up just 1.4% of all consumer debt, it accounts for 5% of non-mortgage debt. For comparison, credit card debt is much higher, sitting at $1.211 trillion, or 6.7% of total outstanding debt. According to TransUnion, the average personal loan balance per borrower is $11,607. Nearly half of borrowers take out loans just to consolidate or refinance other debt. Another 10% use the money to pay everyday bills. Trending: Invest where it hurts — and help millions heal:. As Cardone wrote, 'You pay extra for everything' when you're stuck in debt. High interest rates only make it worse. Borrowers with excellent credit scores — over 720 — can expect personal loan APRs around 17.71%. But for those with poor credit — below 560 — rates skyrocket to over 200%, according to LendingTree data. Despite high costs, personal loan use is expected to grow. People turn to them as credit card debt rises. LendingTree notes that many borrowers aren't necessarily in crisis—they might be remodeling a home or covering a big expense. Still, as Cardone puts it, for those already stretched thin, more borrowing can result in serious stress and financial strain. Delinquency rates also tell a cautionary tale. TransUnion reported that as of Q4 2024, 3.57% of personal loan accounts were 60 or more days past due. That's an improvement from the year before but still higher than rates for mortgages — 1.29% — or credit cards — 2.56%. Cardone's message is harsh but timely. With debt balances climbing and millions relying on personal loans to stay afloat, his warning resonates: consumer debt doesn't just drain your wallet—it can drain your peace of mind. Read Next: Maximize saving for your retirement and cut down on taxes: . The average American couple has saved this much money for retirement —?UNLOCKED: 5 NEW TRADES EVERY WEEK. Click now to get top trade ideas daily, plus unlimited access to cutting-edge tools and strategies to gain an edge in the markets. Get the latest stock analysis from Benzinga? LENDINGTREE (TREE): Free Stock Analysis Report TRANSUNION (TRU): Free Stock Analysis Report This article Grant Cardone Says 'Consumer Debt Makes Slaves.' It Stops You From Investing, Costs You More, And Chains You To Stress originally appeared on © 2025 Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.