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U.S. travel abroad declined in 2011

U.S. travel abroad declined in 2011

The U.S. resident outbound market totaled 58.7 million in 2011, down three percent from 2010. Travel to overseas regions declined five percent, while travel to Mexico and Canada were flat and down one percent, respectively. This is the fourth straight year for declines in the total number of Americans going abroad.

The top five countries visited by U.S. residents in 2011, were: Mexico (20.1 million), Canada (11.6 million), the United Kingdom (2.4 million), France (1.8 million) and Italy (1.7 million). Only three of the top 10 destinations visited by U.S. travelers posted increases in 2011.

Spending by U.S. residents traveling abroad (imports) totaled $109.8 billion, up seven percent from 2010. Spending within foreign countries (travel payments) totaled $78.7 billion, up four percent, and U.S. travelers spending on transportation, via foreign carriers (passenger fare payments), totaled $31.1 billion in 2011, up 14 percent. Top countries for U.S. spending included Mexico ($9.3 billion), the United Kingdom ($8.7 billion), Canada ($7.7 billion), Germany ($5.7 billion), and Japan ($5.0 billion).