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Canadians and Americans alike souring on cross-border travel, new data shows, as day trips plummet

Data released Wednesday shows a nearly 18 per cent decline in Canadian return trips from the U.S. in February compared with last year, while there was a more than five per cent drop in Americans travelling north.

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Vehicles prepare to enter the U.S. from Canada at the Peace Arch border crossing in Blaine, Wash. Crossings by car are down on both sides of the border, according to Statistics Canada and U.S. Customs and Border Protection.


U.S. President Donald Trump’s trade war with Canada hit North America’s tourism industry quicklyÌý— and hard, according ³Ù´ÇÌý.

More than 450,000 fewer Canadians returned from trips to the U.S. in February compared to January, according to travel data released Wednesday. Much of the decline wasÌýdriven by a nearly 300,000 drop in day trips by Canadians south of the border.

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Nathan Bawaan

Nathan Bawaan is a Toronto-based general assignment reporter for the Star. Reach him via email: nbawaan@thestar.ca

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