(Detroit, MI) – Travel from Canada to Michigan and the rest of the U.S. dropped sharply in 2025, falling over 15-percent from 2024. U.S. Customs and Border Protection data says just over eight-point-three-million Canadians came to Michigan last year at all four entry points, down from over nine-point-eight-million in 2024. Travel in Port Huron from Sarnia dropped 24-point-six-percent, and fell by ten-percent in Detroit at the Detroit-Windsor Tunnel and Ambassador Bridge.
The biggest drop was in the Upper Peninsula, where travel into Sault Ste. Marie was down 26-percent.
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