
Tourism from and Exports to NY's Largest Trading Partner, Canada, Severely Impacted
New York had one of the steepest drops of any state in international tourism in 2025, with overseas travelers falling 3% — a loss of over 176,000 visitors — second only to California, according to an analysis released today by State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli. The decline is hurting the state’s economy, as fewer visitors means less spending and a smaller number of jobs in hotels and restaurants. The impact is most acute for areas near the Canadian border, where travel from Canada fell by more than 21%, a decrease of nearly 3.6 million visitors. Exports to Canada also declined by $3.8 billion due to tariffs.
“Federal policies are driving foreign travelers away and taking billions in tourism spending and harming our economy as exports substantially decline,” DiNapoli said. “That loss of revenue means fewer jobs in New York and tougher times for those working in the tourism industry. We’re already seeing the consequences, especially in hotels and restaurants in those regions near the Canadian border. New York is a top destination for tourists to the U.S., and policies that welcome and encourage international travel are needed to avoid damaging economic consequences.”
DiNapoli’s report found that international travelers spent nearly $17 billion in New York in 2024 according to the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. However, tourism-related Gross Domestic Product (GDP) was flat in 2025, hotel occupancy fell 1.2%, and employment trends were uneven — down 2.6% in the North Country and 2% in Western New York, but up 1% in New York City.
In 2024, there were over 932,400 private sector jobs in New York in industries associated with international travel, paying over $45.4 billion in wages. Nearly three-quarters of the employment (74.2%) was in accommodation and food services. Through September 2025, average employment in these industries increased by 1,782 jobs, 0.2%, over the same period in 2024, compared to private sector job growth of 1% in all other industries in the state. However, there were 798 fewer jobs in accommodation and food services, a decline of 0.1%.
Along with the decline in international visitors, DiNapoli’s report found a drop of 18.2% in the number of visitors to New York’s national park sites in 2025, according to the National Park Service. Attendance at state parks fell by more than 2.3 million in 2025, led by declines at Jones Beach, Bear Mountain, and Niagara Reservation, according to the New York State Office for Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation.
Impact on New York Trade
As a result of new tariff policies implemented under the Trump administration in 2025, exports declined to almost one-half of New York’s trading partners. Among the highest declines were in exports to Canada, the state’s most significant trading partner. Exports of more than two-thirds of product categories from New York declined. Exports to almost half of the nations (46.1%) the state does business with declined; those to Canada decreased by $3.8 billion and to Israel by $1.4 billion. While Belgium is not one of the state’s largest trading partners, it had the third largest decline in exports in 2025, $853 million (36.5%).
Exports to the United Kingdom, Switzerland and Hong Kong increased, with those to Switzerland and the United Kingdom over triple the 2024 amount, primarily reflecting significant growth in the trade of goods manufactured from nonferrous metal, excluding aluminum. Export growth was likely influenced by the significant increase in prices of the underlying metals. Excluding these products, New York exports declined, on a net basis, by $3.4 billion.
DiNapoli has an online tool that is tracking federal support to New York and how changes made by the federal government are affecting New York’s industries and economy. He has also released a series of reports on the tourism industry, tracking the abrupt shutdown caused by the pandemic in 2020, the post-COVID recovery and now how federal actions, including tariffs and immigration restrictions, have impacted tourism in New York.
Reports
Federal Impact: Travel and Tourism to New York – Federal Funding and New York
Economic Impact of Tariffs – Federal Funding and New York
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