Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

Low Dollar, Food And Shopping Enticing Americans And Others To Visit Canada

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Jan, 2016 12:50 PM
    MONTREAL — From British Columbia to Montreal, the low Canadian dollar is proving a boon to the tourism sector.
     
    Dragged down by cheap oil and an international slump in commodity prices, the dollar is trading at around 70 cents against the greenback and enticing Americans to travel north of the border.
     
    "We're getting more reservations at the last minute from Americans planning trips for the weekend," says Eve Pare, head of the Hotel Association of Greater Montreal.
     
    Montreal-area hotels in December made more than $40 million, up more than nine per cent from a year earlier, Pare noted.
     
    The city's tourism bureau said last summer's season — between June and August — saw a 10 per cent increase year over year in the number of American tourists crossing the border into Quebec.
     
    For Katie, 20, a McGill University student from New York State, the low Canadian dollar means her tuition is "basically nothing."
     
    On a mini-vacation with her friend Jack, 21, also from New York, the two said they were spending more than they regularly would on eating out.
     
    "I've been taking advantage already," says Jack, standing on a corner in Old Montreal. "We're going out to nicer dinners than normally because it means you can take off 40 per cent from the bill."
     
    Around the corner at the Jacques Cartier Square, Adriana Carvalho, 43, from Brazil, said she and her partner had been planning on visiting the United States but changed their minds at the last minute to take advantage of the dollar.
     
    The Brazilian real is trading at 24 cents US while it's at about 34 cents in Canada.
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Opposition Says Government Needs To Be Clearer About Options To Balance Budget

    Opposition Says Government Needs To Be Clearer About Options To Balance Budget
    REGINA — Premier Brad Wall says Saskatchewan's finance minister was talking about options governments face when they're short revenue when he used the phrase "draconian cuts."

    Opposition Says Government Needs To Be Clearer About Options To Balance Budget

    Fight Brewing Between Moosehead Breweries, Regina Beer Maker Over Beer Name

    Fight Brewing Between Moosehead Breweries, Regina Beer Maker Over Beer Name
    Moosehead Breweries of Ontario has informed Regina's District Brewery that it opposes the name of District's flagship beer, Mues Knuckle.

    Fight Brewing Between Moosehead Breweries, Regina Beer Maker Over Beer Name

    Government-Assisted Syrians To Dominate Arrivals By End Of February

    Government-Assisted Syrians To Dominate Arrivals By End Of February
    A plan rolled out last fall had the Liberals aiming to bring 10,000 Syrians to Canada through private sponsorship and a further 15,000 under government assistance by the end of February.

    Government-Assisted Syrians To Dominate Arrivals By End Of February

    B.C. Ranchers Protect 4,500 Hectares Of Land From Development: Conservancy

    B.C. Ranchers Protect 4,500 Hectares Of Land From Development: Conservancy
    INVERMERE, B.C. — A southeastern British Columbia ranch 11 times the size of Stanley Parks has been protected from development by its owners.

    B.C. Ranchers Protect 4,500 Hectares Of Land From Development: Conservancy

    Feds Seek More Cities To Take Syrian Refugees But Will Only Pay Until Next Year

    Feds Seek More Cities To Take Syrian Refugees But Will Only Pay Until Next Year
    OTTAWA — More cities could see Syrian refugees sent their way but federal funds to help support them will only last until March 2017.

    Feds Seek More Cities To Take Syrian Refugees But Will Only Pay Until Next Year

    Hottest Average Global Temperature Ever Recorded Didn't Apply To Canada In 2015

    Hottest Average Global Temperature Ever Recorded Didn't Apply To Canada In 2015
    Call it cold comfort, but Atlantic Canada was one of the only regions on the planet that had cooler-than-average temperatures last year, according to Environment Canada.

    Hottest Average Global Temperature Ever Recorded Didn't Apply To Canada In 2015