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Canadians Shift Travel Priorities in 2026

New report reveals a move toward domestic and value-aligned international travel

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Canadian travel to the U.S. continued to decline in January, according to the latest data from Statistics Canada, even as overall international travel increased by 11.1%. The trend builds on a 28% decline in travel to the U.S. in 2025 and aligns with a new consumer report from Flight Centre Canada suggesting the shift may continue. According to a national YouGov survey, 62% of Canadians say they are less likely to visit the U.S. in 2026 compared to last year — signalling a pullback that appears increasingly structural rather than seasonal. What hasn’t changed is Canadians’ desire to travel, only how they are deciding where to go.

“Over the past year, we’ve seen a redistribution of Canadian travel spending,” says Chris Lynes, Managing Director of Flight Centre Travel Group Canada. “While U.S. travel has softened, outbound travel to other international destinations and interest in domestic trips has strengthened. If sustained, this could permanently reshape where Canadian travel dollars flow.”

Report Insights

  • U.S Travel Comfort Has Eroded
    • The U.S. is no longer the default destination as six in 10 Canadians (62%) say they are less likely to visit in 2026 compared to last year. Only 8% are more likely to visit.
    • The top factors affecting the decision are political/cultural climate (57%), border hassles/ travel restrictions (53%), safety/security concerns (46%) and cost/exchange rate (44%).
  • Canada and Europe Come Out on Top
    • Canada ranks as the top destination of the year with 37% of Canadians placing it in the number one spot on their travel wishlists.
  • Confidence in Europe surges with one in four Canadians (25%) slotting it into their top travel spot, making it the second most desirable location for 2026. Mexico and Asia each garner 9% of the vote.
  • It’s About Values and Value
  • For 86% of Canadians, travel feels different this year with nearly six in 10 Canadians (58%) saying cost will ultimately determine where they travel. Still, 20% say they are willing to pay more to travel within Canada to support local jobs.

These mindset changes signal a new era of Canadian travel — one driven by purpose, ease and value. In 2026, that means staying close to home with adventures in Banff and Lake Louise, zipping to Europe to explore alternative destinations like Croatia, the Azores and Italy’s Sardegna and Umbria regions, or stretching the Canadian dollar further in Asia, the top destination of the year for 15% of Gen Z.