
The Ambassador Bridge stretches between Windsor, Ontario, and Detroit, as seen from the Canadian side of the border. CBC News
Canada’s travel habits at the U.S. border changed sharply last year, according to newly compiled border data. Figures for 2025 show a steep and lasting drop in the number of Canadians driving to the United States and returning by land.
Sharp Decline in Cross-Border Driving
New numbers reveal that Canadian vehicle trips to the United States fell by 30.9 percent compared to 2024. Border officials processed about 16.9 million Canadian vehicles in 2025, down from nearly 25 million the year before. That means roughly 7.6 million fewer vehicle crossings in just one year.
An analyst with Statistics Canada described the drop as unusual, both in size and duration.
“I will say that the decline that we're seeing in 2025 is notable because of its length and the depth of the decline,” said Laura Presley. “It hasn't been too often in our history where we've seen drops of that level for as long of a period.”
Presley said past events such as major security concerns or financial downturns caused short-term dips, but traffic levels usually recovered faster than what the data now shows.
U.S. Visitors to Canada Also Decrease
The slowdown did not move in only one direction. Fewer Americans also crossed into Canada last year. Data shows American residents entering Canada dropped by 6.3 percent from 2024. Presley noted that while the decline mattered, it did not reach the same scale as the drop in Canadian trips south.
Before 2025, cross-border travel had remained fairly steady for years, making the recent change stand out even more.
Border Cities Feel a Smaller Impact
National figures tell only part of the story. Some major crossings, especially in southern Ontario, saw much smaller declines. The Windsor–Detroit corridor recorded about 3.41 million Canadian vehicle entries into Canada in 2025, down from 3.8 million the year before. That change represents a decrease of roughly 11 percent.
Leaders at the Windsor–Detroit Tunnel reported even milder effects. Tal Czudner, who oversees the Canadian side of the tunnel, said traffic dropped by only about 4.5 percent year over year.
“I consider our story a success story,” Czudner said. “We’re only down around 4.5 percent on a year-to-year basis.”
Why Windsor Stays Busier
Czudner pointed to daily cross-border work as a major reason. Thousands of residents from Windsor-Essex commute to Detroit every day for jobs in health care, technology, engineering, and automotive manufacturing. He also said close distance, reasonable toll costs, and strong interest in Detroit sports teams continue to draw travelers despite national trends.
A Shift Still Taking Shape
While analysts do not link the decline to any single cause, the data confirms a clear shift in travel behavior. Border crossings remained busy in some regions, but overall Canadian land travel to the United States dropped sharply and stayed low throughout 2025.

