
21 February 2026
Canada Travel Advisories 2025 Caribbean Mexico US Safety Warnings for Winter Travelers
Canada Travel Advisory
About
Canada's travel advisory system provides essential guidance for travelers planning trips abroad, with the Government of Canada maintaining four distinct risk levels to help citizens understand safety conditions in different destinations. These categories—"Take normal security precautions," "Exercise a high degree of caution," "Avoid non-essential travel," and "Avoid all travel"—assess factors including crime rates, political unrest, natural disasters, and disruptions to essential services.
For listeners considering Caribbean and Central American getaways, several popular winter sun destinations currently carry heightened caution advisories. Jamaica faces an "Exercise a high degree of caution" warning due to high levels of violent crime, particularly outside tourist areas and in urban centers like Kingston and Montego Bay. The Dominican Republic carries the same advisory level due to widespread crime concerns affecting even tourist regions. The Bahamas similarly warrants heightened awareness, especially in Nassau and Freeport where crime rates remain elevated. Belize, Turks and Caicos Islands, and Cuba all maintain "Exercise a high degree of caution" advisories, with Cuba's specific concerns centered on worsening shortages of electricity, fuel, food, water, and medicine that could affect resort operations and disrupt flight availability.
Mexico, one of Canada's most popular destinations, requires particular attention. The Canadian government advises avoiding non-essential travel to Chiapas, Chihuahua, Colima, Guerrero, Michoacán, and specific regions within Jalisco and Sinaloa due to high levels of criminal activity and kidnapping. Even well-known tourist destinations like Cancún, Mazatlán, and Puerto Vallarta have experienced violent incidents in hotels, restaurants, and nightclubs, with clashes between criminal organizations erupting without warning.
For travelers heading to the United States, recent updates to Canada's travel advisory page address specific requirements for First Nations persons and Native Americans born in Canada. According to the Government of Canada's travel guidance, while these individuals may technically cross the Canada-U.S. border by land or water using a Secure Certificate of Indian Status, acceptance remains entirely at the discretion of U.S. officials. The advisory strongly recommends carrying both a valid passport and a valid machine-readable secure status card, as standard status cards are not accepted for air travel. U.S. authorities strictly enforce entry requirements, and individual border agents retain significant discretion in making entry determinations.
For all cross-border travel, listeners are strongly advised to carry a valid passport and expect heightened scrutiny at ports of entry, including examination of electronic devices. Travel data from late 2025 reveals significant impacts on border crossing volumes, with traffic down substantially compared to previous years at major crossing points between British Columbia and Washington state.
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
For listeners considering Caribbean and Central American getaways, several popular winter sun destinations currently carry heightened caution advisories. Jamaica faces an "Exercise a high degree of caution" warning due to high levels of violent crime, particularly outside tourist areas and in urban centers like Kingston and Montego Bay. The Dominican Republic carries the same advisory level due to widespread crime concerns affecting even tourist regions. The Bahamas similarly warrants heightened awareness, especially in Nassau and Freeport where crime rates remain elevated. Belize, Turks and Caicos Islands, and Cuba all maintain "Exercise a high degree of caution" advisories, with Cuba's specific concerns centered on worsening shortages of electricity, fuel, food, water, and medicine that could affect resort operations and disrupt flight availability.
Mexico, one of Canada's most popular destinations, requires particular attention. The Canadian government advises avoiding non-essential travel to Chiapas, Chihuahua, Colima, Guerrero, Michoacán, and specific regions within Jalisco and Sinaloa due to high levels of criminal activity and kidnapping. Even well-known tourist destinations like Cancún, Mazatlán, and Puerto Vallarta have experienced violent incidents in hotels, restaurants, and nightclubs, with clashes between criminal organizations erupting without warning.
For travelers heading to the United States, recent updates to Canada's travel advisory page address specific requirements for First Nations persons and Native Americans born in Canada. According to the Government of Canada's travel guidance, while these individuals may technically cross the Canada-U.S. border by land or water using a Secure Certificate of Indian Status, acceptance remains entirely at the discretion of U.S. officials. The advisory strongly recommends carrying both a valid passport and a valid machine-readable secure status card, as standard status cards are not accepted for air travel. U.S. authorities strictly enforce entry requirements, and individual border agents retain significant discretion in making entry determinations.
For all cross-border travel, listeners are strongly advised to carry a valid passport and expect heightened scrutiny at ports of entry, including examination of electronic devices. Travel data from late 2025 reveals significant impacts on border crossing volumes, with traffic down substantially compared to previous years at major crossing points between British Columbia and Washington state.
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI