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    Home » U.S. international arrivals fell in 2025 as Canada trips dropped
    Travel

    U.S. international arrivals fell in 2025 as Canada trips dropped

    January 28, 2026
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    MENA Newswire, WASHINGTON: International travel to the United States softened in 2025 as several major inbound markets posted lower volumes, with government and industry data showing year over year declines during key months and weaker performance from some of the country’s largest sources of visitors, including Canada and several high volume overseas markets.

    U.S. international arrivals fell in 2025 as Canada trips dropped
    International travel to the United States fell in 2025, led by much weaker arrivals from Canada. (AI-generated image)

    U.S. Department of Commerce travel figures showed international visitor arrivals totaled 5,846,506 in October 2025, down 5.7% from October 2024. In June 2025, arrivals totaled 5,278,944, a 6.2% decline from June 2024. Similar year over year decreases were reported in other 2025 monthly releases tracking travel to and from the United States.

    Canada, typically the largest single source of U.S. inbound travel, also recorded sharp pullbacks in cross border trip volumes on the Canadian side of the ledger. Statistics Canada reported Canadian resident return trips from the United States fell 18.7% by air in December 2025 versus the same month a year earlier, while return trips by automobile dropped 30.7%, a proxy measure widely used to gauge overall cross border travel demand.

    The pullback came as global travel remained resilient. UN Tourism reported international tourist arrivals worldwide rose 4% in 2025, underscoring a divergence between broad global growth and softer U.S. inbound performance measured in several U.S. reporting periods.

    U.S. arrival and spending indicators

    Tourism and travel data published by the U.S. government also highlighted where inbound volumes were concentrated even as totals fell. In October 2025, the largest number of international visitor arrivals came from Mexico and Canada, followed by the United Kingdom, Germany, and South Korea, with those five markets accounting for 61.3% of all international arrivals for the month. The top overseas tourism arrivals that month included the United Kingdom, Germany, South Korea, France, and Brazil.

    Across 2025, major long haul markets such as France, Germany, China, South Korea, and India remained central to U.S. inbound travel flows in monthly tallies and category breakdowns, including tourism, business, and student travel. Monthly summaries also showed India and China among the leading sources for certain arrival purposes, reflecting their continued importance even as overall travel volumes fluctuated.

    Industry assessments pointed to a meaningful economic impact from the inbound slowdown. The World Travel & Tourism Council said the United States was projected to see international visitor spending fall to just under $169 billion in 2025, down from $181 billion in 2024, a decline that would affect travel related export revenue tied to overseas visitors.

    Key markets and destination effects

    Destination level signals also suggested weaker visitor activity in some tourism dependent hubs. The Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority reported the city hosted 35.46 million visitors through November 2025, down 7.4% from the same period in 2024, with the authority citing reduced international visitation among the factors weighing on totals alongside broader travel patterns.

    While inbound travel softened in several reporting periods, outbound travel by U.S. citizens remained comparatively strong in the same U.S. government releases. For example, the Commerce Department reported U.S. citizen departures totaled 8,691,389 in October 2025, up 3.3% from October 2024, and 11,473,103 in June 2025, up 2.5% from June 2024, widening the contrast between inbound and outbound travel flows.

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