Canadian leisure carrier Air Transat will stop flying to the U.S. in June.
The Montreal-based airline removed its last three U.S. routes from its future schedule last week, consulting firm Ailevon Pacific reported. Flights between Montreal and Orlando end May 4. Flights connecting Quebec City and Fort Lauderdale end May 30. And flights between Montreal and Fort Lauderdale end June 13.
Air Transat flew nine U.S. routes as recently as last March, but has pulled back from cross-border flying since outbound Canada demand dropped in response to President Trump's tariffs and his comments about making Canada the 51st state.
Travel Weekly has reached out to Air Transat for comment.
In addition, Canada's WestJet has removed 10 routes to the U.S. from its schedule, Ailevon Pacific said. Those include three routes from Edmonton, three from Vancouver, and one from Toronto, Halifax, Winipeg and Montreal.
Overall, WestJet's cuts last week reduced its U.S. schedule for July by 26.2%, Cirium data shows.
Travel Weekly has reached out to WestJet for comment.
This month, airlines overall are operating 6.2% fewer flights and offering 10.1% fewer seats between the U.S. and Canada than they did in February 2025.