Americans Name 10 Countries They Now Avoid Traveling

UNITED STATES — A Global Rescue survey of 1,400 experienced travelers reveals mounting friction toward U.S. tourists in key destinations, from water pistols in Spain to boycotts in Canada.

By Jeff Colhoun · Updated 4 min read

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UNITED STATES — The welcome mat is fraying at borders where it once rolled out easily. American tourists, once greeted as enthusiastic spenders and steady arrivals, are reporting cooler receptions, outright hostility, and a growing sense that their presence isn't always appreciated. This isn't anecdotal griping from a few thin-skinned vacationers. The pattern is showing up in data, in behavior on the ground, and in the way certain destinations now view U.S. arrivals.

A Global Rescue Snap Survey conducted in March 2025 polled more than 1,400 experienced travelers and found that the majority expect U.S. tourists will be less welcome abroad moving forward. That expectation aligns with what's already happening on the street level in multiple countries: from water pistols aimed at visitors on Spanish beaches to an unprecedented Canadian boycott that is shaking border economies. The friction is real, measurable, and spreading across continents.

France: The Poster Child for American Fatigue

France continues to rank among the most unwelcoming destinations for American visitors. A 2025 Upgraded Points survey found that 15% of French respondents admitted Americans aren't always wanted, a sentiment fueled by perceptions of entitlement and behavioral clashes. U.S. favorability in France plunged 33 points by early 2025, a dramatic drop linked to trade tensions and shifting political dynamics between Washington and Paris.

This isn't abstract diplomatic theater. The coolness translates into real interactions. American travelers report terse service, impatience with English requests, and an undercurrent of resentment that didn't exist at this intensity a decade ago. The historic cultural tensions between American tourists and French locals have always simmered, but they've reached a boil fueled by larger geopolitical pressures that bleed into everyday exchanges in cafes and museums.

Spain and the Water Pistol Protests

Spain made headlines for one of the more visceral displays of tourist frustration: locals in Barcelona and other high-traffic coastal zones turning water pistols on visitors as a form of protest. The target isn't exclusively American, but U.S. tourists form a significant portion of those caught in the spray. The underlying issue is over-tourism and the strain it places on housing, infrastructure, and quality of life for residents. American travelers, visible and often oblivious to the local backlash brewing around them, become easy symbols of the problem.

What started as activist demonstrations has normalized into a broader cultural pushback. The message is clear: you're crowding us out. For Americans used to traveling with minimal friction, the shift is jarring. The warm Mediterranean welcome has been replaced by irritation, and in some neighborhoods, outright antagonism.

Canada: The Boycott That's Biting Back

Closer to home, Canada has become the site of an unprecedented travel boycott targeting American visitors. Border economies that have long relied on cross-border shopping, tourism, and seasonal traffic are feeling the impact. The boycott isn't government-mandated; it's grassroots, driven by political frustration and trade disputes that have soured relations between the two neighbors.

Canadian businesses dependent on U.S. tourism are caught in the middle, struggling to balance national sentiment with economic survival. For American travelers, the experience ranges from cold shoulders to openly unwelcoming signage. The ease and familiarity that once defined cross-border travel between the U.S. and Canada is eroding, replaced by tension that wasn't part of the equation five years ago.

The Pattern: Political Blowback Meets Travel Reality

What ties these disparate examples together is the way geopolitical friction and domestic politics are bleeding into the travel experience. Americans abroad are increasingly seen not just as individuals but as representatives of U.S. policies, trade stances, and political decisions they may or may not support. That conflation is nothing new in unstable or hostile regions, but it's now showing up in traditional allied destinations where Americans once moved freely and comfortably.

Trade tensions, diplomatic rifts, and shifting global alliances are no longer abstract headline material. They affect how you're treated at a hotel check-in desk, whether a taxi driver picks you up, and how much patience a server extends when you fumble through a menu. The survey results from Global Rescue reflect what seasoned travelers already sense: the atmosphere has changed, and it's not swinging back toward warmth anytime soon.

What This Means for U.S. Travelers

For Americans planning international trips, the takeaway isn't to stay home. It's to adjust expectations and approach certain destinations with a clearer understanding of the reception you might face. Being American abroad carries different weight now, and ignoring that reality doesn't make it disappear.

In destinations where anti-American sentiment is rising, travelers benefit from lower profiles, cultural awareness, and a willingness to meet local frustrations with humility rather than defensiveness. The days of assuming a U.S. passport guarantees a warm welcome are fading. In their place is a more complex landscape where your nationality can be a liability as much as a convenience.

The friction isn't universal, and plenty of destinations still welcome American arrivals enthusiastically. But the countries where sentiment is souring aren't outliers anymore. They're part of a broader pattern that experienced travelers are noticing, measuring, and responding to with sharper situational awareness. If you're booking travel to France, Spain, or even Canada, factor in the political climate alongside the weather forecast. It matters more than it used to.

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