JET LAG

Overseas Visits to Canada Continue to Lag, StatsCan

The number of travellers visiting Canada has increased over the past four years, but is still below pre-pandemic levels, a new Statistics Canada report states.

The latest StatsCan travel report says roughly 3.6 million non-residents visited Canada in June 2024. That's down 6.3% compared to June 2019, the last summer before pandemic travel restrictions put a major crimp in Canadian visitation stats.

US residents in June took 2.9 million trips to Canada, up 9.2% from the 2.7 million trips taken during the same month in 2023.

That’s just 3.4% short of June 2019, pre-pandemic levels.

Just shy of 746,000 overseas residents arrived in Canada in June. That’s an increase of 6.3% from the 701,700 arrivals observed in the same month in 2023, but it’s only 83.9% of pre-pandemic numbers. Looked at another way, it’s 16.1% fewer visitors than in June of 2019.

“Toronto welcomed 26.5 million visitors in 2023, with domestic visitors representing 88%,"  said Kathy Motton, Senior Manager of Corporate Communications, Destination Toronto.
Motton told Open Jaw that Toronto’s visitor economy has always benefited from a diverse mix of visitors coming from across the country, the U.S. and overseas markets.
While some markets, like the domestic and Mexican market, are doing well, other key markets like China have not yet recovered for a variety of reasons ranging from flight access to diplomatic issues" she said. "Similarly, meetings and events and business travel have not yet fully recovered. For the visitor economy to be the economic engine it has proven to be for jobs and growth, all markets need to return to full steam.”

“China was our number one international (overseas) market prior to the pandemic, Andrew Weir, president of Destination Toronto, told me in an interview earlier  this year. "We had 300,000 Chinese visitors to Toronto. But we’re only at 10% of that."

U.S. and domestic visitors are great, but Canadian cities need higher spending international visitors, Weir said.

“International visitors spend more, do more, stay longer, and do more to help our businesses.”

Destination Canada recently launched its new tourism strategy, ‘A World of Opportunity, ‘ which focuses on transforming the Canadian tourism sector and catapulting Canada back into the top seven global destinations by 2030.

The strategy is designed to increase Canada’s global competitiveness and bring in up to $160 billion in annual revenue by 2030, “transcending the traditional constraints that currently cap the tourism industry’s potential at $140 billion.”

In addition to looking at inbound Canadian visitation numbers, the June StatsCan report said Canadian residents returned from 3.8 million trips abroad in June, an increase of 12.0% from June 2023 (3.4 million). That level represents 90.0% of such trips taken during the same month in 2019 (4.3 million).

Jim Byers

Contributor

Jim Byers is a freelance travel writer based in Toronto. He was formerly travel editor at the Toronto Star and now writes for a variety of publications in Canada and around the world. He's also a regular guest on CBC, CTV News, Global News and other television and radio networks.

You may also like
Janet Wygert, Senior Vice President of Sales and Trade Marketing for Carnival Cruise Line
New Head of Sales & Trade Marketing at Carnival Announced
We are excited to share that Janet Wygert, a 37-year veteran of Carnival Cruise Line, has been promoted to lead trade ...
Flair Launches In-Seat Ordering, New Website and a New Site
Flair Airlines has introduced Flair FWD, with perks like an On-Time Guarantee and in-seat ordering.
Stan Cho, Minister of Tourism, Culture and Gaming.
Ontario Minister of Tourism to Address Toronto Skål
Skål Toronto has announced that Honourable Minister Stan Cho, Minister of Tourism, Culture and Gaming for Ontario will be the key-note ...
Business Travel
GBTA: Business Travel Buyers Forecast “Significant” Decline
Following optimistic forecasts for corporate travel back in Nov, the GBTA now finds travel buyers are either pessimistic or very pessimistic ...
Canada and US Flags at the border
Canada-US Form Travel Coalition Against Tourism-Harming Policies
A newly formed Beyond Borders Tourism Coalition (BBTC) brings together travel associations in the US and Canada to tackle the challenges ...

Talk Back! Post a comment: