Data reveals 42% drop in Canadian visits to U.S. last year

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Data reveals 42% drop in Canadian visits to U.S. last year

Toronto — The neighbors just aren't visiting the way they used to. A study by the University of Toronto suggests a roughly 42% reduction in visits to U.S. cities by residents of Canada last year. …

Toronto — The neighbors just aren't visiting the way they used to. A study by the University of Toronto suggests a roughly 42% reduction in visits to U.S. cities by residents of Canada last year. The drop — much steeper than official border crossing statistics suggest — is largely attributed to mounting political and trade tension between the two countries. By tracking cellphone activity, University of Toronto researchers found "a year-over-year median decline of approximately 42% in Canadian visits to U.S. metropolitan areas." According to official statistics , the number of Canadians who entered the country after returning from the U.S. in 2025 was down 25%, while the number of U.S. residents visiting Canada dropped 75%. According to the study, Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, saw the biggest drop, with some 65% fewer Canadian residents coming home from the East Coast vacation hot spot. Yuma, Arizona, saw a 62% decrease. San Francisco and the Florida cities of Miami, Palm Bay and Panama City were among the other top 10 U.S. metro areas where the data indicates a more than 50% drop in visiting Canadians last year. The study's authors say, aside from the evident drop in vacation visits by Canadians , the data also reveals a sharp drop in visits to major economic hubs. …

Original source: CBS News Top

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