Canada can’t do away with COVID-19 tests for travellers just yet, Freeland says
WASHINGTON — Canada still can’t afford to take any chances when it comes to COVID-19, Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland said Thursday — and that includes requiring travellers to show a negative test result before entering the country.
Freeland happened to be in Washington this week for multilateral meetings with her fellow G7 and G20 finance ministers, as well as officials from the World Bank and International Monetary Fund.
Her visit overlapped with the news from U.S. President Joe Biden’s administration that fully vaccinated Canadian travellers would be once again allowed to drive across the border early next month.
The Biden administration’s rules don’t include requiring a recent COVID-19 test — unlike Canada, which made the sophisticated $200 tests a cornerstone of its strategy for easing its own border restrictions earlier this year.

