MAINE: Maine’s tourism industry is contending with a prolonged drop in Canadian travel to the United States, a trend that has extended into early 2026 and is weighing on one of the state’s most dependable visitor markets. Statistics Canada said Canadian residents returned from 2.1 million trips to the U.S. in January, down 22% from a year earlier and marking the 13th straight monthly decline, while February return trips from the U.S. totaled 1.5 million, down 14.5% from the same month of 2025.

In Maine, the pullback matters because Canadian travelers remain a significant part of the visitor economy. State data show nearly 800,000 Canadian visitors spent about $497.7 million in Maine in 2024. Across all markets, Maine welcomed 14.8 million visitors who spent more than $9.2 billion, supporting 115,900 jobs and generating $5.4 billion in wages. That made the Canadian slowdown especially important for communities and businesses that depend on repeat summer visitors from Quebec and the Maritime provinces.
Those pressures showed up in Maine’s 2025 travel data. Border counts into the state from Canada stayed well below prior year levels through the peak season, with July crossings down 28% from a year earlier and total entries into Maine down about 25% in the first seven months of 2025. The Maine Office of Tourism’s Summer 2025 Visitor Tracking Report later showed total visitation fell 2.1% to 7.59 million visitors, while the share of visitors coming from Canada dropped to 4% from 7% the previous summer.
Canadian Market Shrinks In Peak Season
The state’s tourism report showed the decline in Canadian travel did not produce a broad collapse across the industry, but it did reduce one important source of demand. Summer direct visitor spending still rose 1.4% to about $5.25 billion, helped by longer stays among overnight travelers and higher accommodation spending. At the same time, the report said there were fewer Canadian visitors than a year earlier, and overall visitor totals were lower, underscoring the gap left when a nearby and historically reliable market contracts.
The strain was especially visible in southern coastal communities and on Maine’s busiest highway. The Maine Turnpike Authority said cash paying Canadian traffic on the turnpike fell 45% from May through August 2025, while transactions from Canadian Maine E-ZPass users were down about 20% in June and July. In Old Orchard Beach, where Canadians are estimated to account for 30% to 40% of all visitors in a typical year, hospitality operators reported softer demand before summer, with some businesses citing booking declines ranging from about 10% to nearly 20%.
Cross Border Weakness Extends Into 2026
The broader travel pattern has yet to reverse. Statistics Canada said January travel data showed Canadian trips to the U.S. were down 22% from a year earlier, with auto trips falling 26.3%, and February data showed Canadian return trips from the U.S. by air fell 17.6% while trips by automobile dropped 12.9%. Separate U.S. travel figures for 2025 also showed foreign visits to the United States were down 5.4% through November, including 4 million fewer visits from Canada, or a 22% decline from the prior year.
For Maine, the latest figures point to a tourism economy that is still drawing domestic visitors but losing ground in a nearby market that has long supported hotels, vacation rentals, restaurants and beach towns. The state’s own 2025 summer report showed fewer Canadians, lower overall visitation and a smaller Canadian share of travel, while border and turnpike counts reflected the same pattern in real time. Entering spring 2026, Canadian travel to the United States remains below year earlier levels, leaving Maine’s tourism sector with a key source of demand still diminished – By Content Syndication Services.
