The best hotels in Canada
We've tested 200+ hotels. These 10 are the ones we'd actually book.
Our Top Picks in Canada
Click any hotel to check availability and book at the best price.
Fairmont Royal York
Financial District, Toronto
Free cancellation & Pay later
Fairmont Pacific Rim
Downtown, Vancouver
Free cancellation & Pay later
Fairmont Le Château Frontenac
Old Quebec, Quebec City
Free cancellation & Pay later
Hotel Le Germain Montreal
Old Montreal, Montreal
Free cancellation & Pay later
The Drake Hotel
Queen West, Toronto
Free cancellation & Pay later
Loden Hotel
Coal Harbour, Vancouver
Free cancellation & Pay later
Broadview Hotel
Riverside, Toronto
Free cancellation & Pay later
Skwachàys Lodge
Gastown, Vancouver
Free cancellation & Pay later
The Rex Hotel
Entertainment District, Toronto
Free cancellation & Pay later
Samesun Vancouver
Granville, Vancouver
Free cancellation & Pay later
All Hotels Compared
Side-by-side comparison to help you pick the right hotel. Prices reflect shoulder season averages.
| # | Hotel | City & Area | Price/Night | Score | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Fairmont Royal York | Financial District, Toronto | CA$220–420/night | 8.8/10 | Best Historic |
| 2 | Fairmont Pacific Rim | Downtown, Vancouver | CA$340–660/night | 9.2/10 | Best Luxury |
| 3 | Fairmont Le Château Frontenac | Old Quebec, Quebec City | CA$260–500/night | 9/10 | Best Castle |
| 4 | Hotel Le Germain Montreal | Old Montreal, Montreal | CA$200–380/night | 8.8/10 | Best Montreal |
| 5 | The Drake Hotel | Queen West, Toronto | CA$160–300/night | 8.6/10 | Best Culture |
| 6 | Loden Hotel | Coal Harbour, Vancouver | CA$240–460/night | 8.9/10 | Best Boutique |
| 7 | Broadview Hotel | Riverside, Toronto | CA$180–340/night | 8.7/10 | Best Design |
| 8 | Skwachàys Lodge | Gastown, Vancouver | CA$140–260/night | 8.5/10 | Best Art |
| 9 | The Rex Hotel | Entertainment District, Toronto | CA$110–200/night | 8.3/10 | Best Budget |
| 10 | Samesun Vancouver | Granville, Vancouver | CA$60–120/night | 8.2/10 | Best Hostel |
Why These Hotels Made Our List
Every hotel earned its spot. Here's exactly why we picked each one.
Fairmont Royal York
Fairmont Royal York is Toronto landmark since 1929. Château-style architecture opposite Union Station. Rooftop herb garden supplies hotel restaurants. Gold-accented lobby, modernized rooms with city views. Walk to CN Tower, Harbourfront, and Rogers Centre. Classic Toronto grandeur.
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Fairmont Pacific Rim
Fairmont Pacific Rim is Vancouver's most luxurious hotel. Harbour-view rooms, rooftop pool overlooking Coal Harbour. Champagne bar, Japanese-French restaurant. Service exceptional with personal butlers. Walk to Gastown, Stanley Park seawall, Canada Place. Modern luxury meets West Coast cool.
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Fairmont Le Château Frontenac
Château Frontenac is Canada's most photographed hotel. Castle-like landmark overlooking St. Lawrence River since 1893. Rooms blend château charm with modern amenities. Dufferin Terrace boardwalk, Petit Champlain shopping, fortified walls all walkable. Quintessential Quebec City experience.
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Hotel Le Germain Montreal
Hotel Le Germain is minimalist boutique in Old Montreal. Sleek rooms with limestone bathrooms, Nespresso machines. Restaurant Victor serves modern Quebec cuisine. Cobblestone streets, Notre-Dame Basilica, Old Port all walkable. Understated luxury with French-Canadian style.
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The Drake Hotel
The Drake is Toronto's creative hub. Boutique rooms with local art, rooftop bar, live music venue. Café serves weekend brunch crowds. Queen West location means vintage shops, galleries, Trinity Bellwoods Park. More cultural experience than typical hotel. Hip and community-minded.
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Loden Hotel
Loden Hotel brings boutique luxury to Coal Harbour. Contemporary rooms with spa-like bathrooms, Nespresso machines. Honour bar with local wines and craft beer. Walking distance to Stanley Park, Robson shopping, convention center. Intimate and stylish. Great location without waterfront prices.
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Broadview Hotel
Broadview Hotel is restored 1891 landmark in East End. Industrial-chic rooms with brick walls and rainfall showers. Rooftop bar has CN Tower views. Neighbourhood has craft breweries, Leslieville shops, Riverdale Park. More character than downtown corporate hotels.
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Skwachàys Lodge
Skwachàys Lodge is Indigenous arts hotel in Gastown. Each room decorated by different First Nations artist. Gallery on ground floor, proceeds support Indigenous youth. Historic building with exposed brick and local materials. Walk to waterfront, Chinatown, and Granville Island ferry. Unique cultural experience.
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The Rex Hotel
The Rex is jazz hotel in Entertainment District. Live music every night in ground-floor club. Simple but comfortable rooms above venue. Walking distance to theaters, Rogers Centre, CN Tower. Budget-friendly with soul. Perfect for music lovers.
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Samesun Vancouver
Samesun is social hostel on Granville strip. Mix of dorms and private rooms, rooftop patio, organized pub crawls. Central location for nightlife, Yaletown, and transit. Clean, safe, and fun. Best budget option for solo travelers and backpackers.
Check AvailabilityWhere to Stay in Canada
The neighborhood you pick matters more than the hotel. Here's what you need to know.
How to choose between Toronto and Vancouver
Toronto is more affordable and more varied. you can stay in Queen West at The Drake for $160/night or splurge at Fairmont Royal York in the Financial District for $420. Vancouver is consistently pricier but the scenery is genuinely stunning, especially around Coal Harbour with the North Shore mountains behind it.
If you've never been to Canada before, Vancouver is the more visually dramatic first impression. Toronto wins if you want culture, food diversity, and neighborhoods that each feel like a different city. Riverside, Kensington Market, and Distillery District are all walkable and distinct. We'd pick Vancouver for 4 nights or fewer; Toronto for anything longer.
The truth about staying in Old Quebec City
Staying inside the walls of Old Quebec. around Rue Saint-Louis or Place d'Armes. means you're 3 minutes from Château Frontenac and everything worth seeing. The trade-off is noise in summer: the Plains of Abraham music festival in August fills every street, and rates at Fairmont Le Château Frontenac spike to $450–500/night that week.
Outside the walls in Lower Town (Basse-Ville), around Rue du Petit-Champlain, you'll find cheaper options. but you're then dealing with the funicular or a 15-minute walk up. Honestly, just pay for the Château and do it properly. It's one of those places where the iconic choice is also the right one.
Vancouver's neighborhoods ranked for first-timers
Coal Harbour is the safest bet. clean, walkable, 10 minutes from both Gastown and Stanley Park. Loden Hotel on Howe Street is right in the middle of it. Gastown is atmospheric but check the exact block; West Cordova near the Steam Clock is fine, but two streets east toward the Downtown Eastside changes things fast.
Granville Entertainment District is cheap. Samesun starts at $60/night. but Friday nights on Granville Street between Robson and Nelson are loud until 3am. Great if you're 22 and in for it. Not great if you're not. We'd pay the extra $80 and stay in Coal Harbour.
Toronto on a budget without staying somewhere awful
The Rex Hotel in the Entertainment District at $110–200/night is the move. You're on Queen Street West near Peter Street, 12 minutes walk from the CN Tower and 8 minutes from TIFF Bell Lightbox. The jazz programming downstairs most nights is a bonus that costs you nothing.
The mistake we see constantly is booking a cheap chain near the Toronto Coach Terminal on Bay Street. bad area, worse value. The Rex is genuinely central with character. Add the $10 day pass on the TTC streetcar and you can reach Kensington Market or the Distillery District in under 20 minutes from anywhere downtown.
Montreal's hotel scene. what to actually know
Hotel Le Germain on Mansfield Street in Old Montreal is the only property we've vetted here, and it earns its 8.8 rating. You're 6 minutes walk from the Notre-Dame Basilica and 10 minutes from the Old Port waterfront on Rue de la Commune. Old Montreal is the obvious place to stay. the cobblestone streets are genuinely beautiful, not faked.
Avoid the chain hotels clustered around Gare Centrale on Boulevard René-Lévesque. they're convenient for train arrivals and absolutely nothing else. The Plateau-Mont-Royal neighborhood on Avenue du Mont-Royal is worth knowing about for independent restaurants; it's a 25-minute walk or one Metro stop on the Orange Line from Old Montreal.
When to book Canada hotels. the real timing
For summer travel. July and August. book 3 to 4 months out minimum. The Calgary Stampede runs the second week of July and ripples hotel prices across western Canada by 15–25%. Toronto's TIFF film festival in early September spikes rates across the Financial District and Queen West for 10 days straight.
Winter is genuinely underrated in Vancouver. prices drop 40% at places like Loden and Pacific Rim, and the city is perfectly livable at 3–7°C. Quebec City's Winter Carnival in February is the opposite: the Château Frontenac sells out by November, and rates hit the top of the $260–500/night range. Plan accordingly.
Explore Canada by city
We cover 12 destinations across Canada. Pick a city for a dedicated hotel guide with neighborhoods, seasonal tips, and our vetted picks.
Canada's best hotel regions
Canada's best stays are spread across four distinct cities. Toronto, Vancouver, Montreal, and Quebec City. Each one plays by its own rules, and picking the wrong neighborhood will cost you time, money, or both.
Toronto 4 vetted hotels Canada's most diverse city. pick the right neighborhood or pay the price.
Canada's most diverse city. pick the right neighborhood or pay the price.
Toronto works best when you plant yourself in the right area from the start. Queen West, around The Drake Hotel on Queen Street West, is where the city's creative energy actually lives. galleries, coffee roasters, vintage shops. The Financial District is for business travelers; Fairmont Royal York is connected directly to Union Station via PATH.
Riverside and Broadview Avenue are worth knowing. It's 15 minutes east of downtown by streetcar on the 501 Queen route, quieter than Queen West, and the Broadview Hotel's rooftop bar has the best skyline view in the city. The Rex Hotel puts you in the Entertainment District near TIFF venues and King Street West restaurants.
Avoid the stretch around Yonge-Dundas Square for hotels. you're paying downtown prices for a location surrounded by chain restaurants and a Times Square knockoff. Walk 10 minutes west to Queen West and the value and experience improve dramatically.
Browse all Toronto hotels → Vancouver 4 vetted hotels Stunning by default. but the neighborhood you pick matters more than the hotel.
Stunning by default. but the neighborhood you pick matters more than the hotel.
Vancouver's Coal Harbour is the most polished base. Loden Hotel on Howe Street and Fairmont Pacific Rim on Canada Place Way both sit here, and you're genuinely 10 minutes walk from Stanley Park's seawall. It's the cleanest, most walkable part of the city with the mountain backdrop doing most of the work.
Gastown is the cultural alternative. Skwachàys Lodge on West Hastings Street is a real Indigenous arts hotel. not a gimmick. and the neighborhood's brick-and-cobblestone streets around Water Street and Blood Alley Square are some of the most photogenic in Canada. The Steam Clock is a 4-minute walk.
Granville is the budget option with trade-offs. Samesun Vancouver on Granville Street starts at $60/night, which is remarkable for this city. But the entertainment strip gets rough on weekends. it's fine if you're social and under 30, and a problem if you're not.
Browse all Vancouver hotels → Quebec City 1 vetted hotel The most European city in North America. and the Château earns its reputation.
The most European city in North America. and the Château earns its reputation.
Quebec City's Old Town is genuinely unlike anywhere else in North America. The fortification walls, the narrow streets of Rue du Trésor, and the clifftop position above the St. Lawrence River make it feel like Brittany transplanted to Canada. Fairmont Le Château Frontenac sits at the top of it all on Rue des Carrières.
The city is small and walkable in a way that Toronto and Vancouver aren't. You can cover Upper Town (Haute-Ville) and Lower Town (Basse-Ville) in a solid day on foot. The funicular between them costs $4.50 and runs every few minutes. though the Breakneck Stairs off Côte de la Montagne are faster and free.
Prices peak hard in February during Carnaval de Québec and again in July–August when the Summer Festival takes over the Plains of Abraham. Book the Château 3–4 months out for those windows or expect to pay the top of the $260–500/night range and still fight for availability.
Browse all Quebec City hotels → Montreal 1 vetted hotel The most interesting city in Canada that most visitors still underestimate.
The most interesting city in Canada that most visitors still underestimate.
Old Montreal. Vieux-Montréal. is the obvious base, and Hotel Le Germain on Mansfield Street at the edge of it is the right call. You're 6 minutes walk from the Notre-Dame Basilica and the cobblestone streets of Rue Saint-Paul. The hotel scores 8.8 and the location does most of the heavy lifting.
But Montreal's real character lives in the neighborhoods visitors skip. The Plateau-Mont-Royal, up Boulevard Saint-Laurent from Sherbrooke, is where Montrealers actually eat, drink, and live. It's one Orange Line Metro stop from Old Montreal's Champ-de-Mars station. Worth half a day at minimum.
The city runs on two food obsessions: bagels from Fairmount Bagel on Avenue Fairmount Ouest and smoked meat from Schwartz's Deli on Boulevard Saint-Laurent. Neither costs more than $15 and both are better than anything with a hotel menu. That's Montreal in a nutshell.
Browse all Montreal hotels →Best Areas by Vibe
Tell us how you travel and we'll point you to the right part of Canada.
Romantic
Old Quebec's Petit-Champlain quarter is the call. candlelit bistros on Rue du Cul-de-Sac and the Château Frontenac looming above you at night. No city in Canada sets that kind of scene.
Culture
Toronto's Queen West, running west from University Avenue to Dufferin Street, packs more galleries, independent theaters, and live music per block than anywhere else in Canada. The Drake Hotel sits right in the middle of it.
Family
Vancouver's Coal Harbour is the easiest base for families. Stanley Park is 10 minutes walk, the seawall is flat and stroller-friendly, and you're away from the noise of Granville. Fairmont Pacific Rim handles kids without making them feel like an afterthought.
Budget
Vancouver's Granville strip, specifically Samesun on Granville Street, starts at $60/night. the lowest vetted price in Canada on this list. The Rex Hotel in Toronto's Entertainment District is the budget pick for private rooms at $110/night.
Beach
Vancouver's English Bay in the West End, 15 minutes walk from Coal Harbour along the seawall, is the closest Canada gets to a proper urban beach scene. It's accessible from both Loden Hotel and Fairmont Pacific Rim without a car.
Foodie
Montreal's Old Port area and the Plateau-Mont-Royal. connected by one Metro stop on the Orange Line. give you smoked meat at Schwartz's, bagels at Fairmount, and a restaurant scene that Toronto chefs quietly envy. Hotel Le Germain puts you right at the center of it.
How We Vetted These Hotels
Every hotel on this list went through the same evaluation. Here's exactly how we score them.
We started with 200+ hotels across 4 regions and 10 cities, then cut anything that relied on brand name alone. What's left are the places we'd actually pay for ourselves.
Location Quality
Is the neighborhood walkable? Are restaurants, shops, and attractions within 10 minutes on foot? How does it feel after dark? We evaluate safety, public transport access, and whether the area has genuine local character or just tourist traps. A hotel in the wrong neighborhood ruins a trip. That's why location carries the most weight.
Value for Money
We compare what you pay against what you get. A €150 hotel with a great location, clean rooms, and helpful staff can outscore a €500 hotel with fancy amenities in a bad area. We factor in seasonal pricing, cancellation policies, and hidden costs like tourist tax and breakfast surcharges. The goal is finding the best ratio, not the lowest price.
Guest Experience
We analyze thousands of verified guest reviews across multiple platforms, looking for patterns rather than individual complaints. Consistent praise for cleanliness, staff, and room quality counts. We also assess the intangibles: does the hotel have character? Would you recommend it to a friend? A soul-less chain hotel with perfect facilities still loses to a well-run boutique with personality.
Hotels that score below 8.0 don't make our list. Hotels can't pay for placement. We update scores every quarter based on new reviews. If a hotel's quality drops, it gets removed. Read more about our approach on the about page.
When to Visit Canada: Season by Season
Hotel prices, crowds, and weather vary dramatically. Here's what to expect each season.
Winter (December–February)
Toronto and Montreal drop to –15°C to –20°C in January. genuinely cold, and not for everyone. Vancouver is the exception at 3–7°C, and hotel prices at Loden and Pacific Rim drop 30–40% from summer peaks. Quebec City's Carnaval de Québec runs in early February and is the one winter event worth planning around. Château Frontenac fills up fast and rates climb back to $400–500/night that specific week.
Spring (March–May)
May is the sweet spot across all four cities. temperatures reach 14–18°C in Toronto and Vancouver, crowds are manageable, and you're not paying summer premiums. Montreal's terrasse season kicks off on the Plateau and in Old Port around mid-May. Book 6–8 weeks ahead for this window; it's when savvy travelers travel, and availability at places like Broadview Hotel and Loden Hotel tightens up faster than most expect.
Summer (June–August)
This is peak Canada. 20–28°C in Toronto, 22–25°C in Vancouver, festivals running constantly, and hotels at their highest prices. Montreal Jazz Festival in late June books up Old Montreal hotels weeks in advance; TIFF in early September does the same to Toronto's Queen West and Financial District. Fairmont Pacific Rim and Fairmont Le Château Frontenac hit their $500–660/night ceilings in July and August. plan for it or book 4 months out.
Fall (September–November)
October is Canada's best-kept travel secret. Temperatures sit at 8–15°C in Toronto and Montreal, the foliage around Mont-Royal Park and in the Laurentians is genuinely spectacular, and hotel prices have dropped 20–30% from August peaks. TIFF ends by mid-September, which means Toronto's Drake Hotel and Royal York snap back to reasonable rates almost overnight. Quebec City in October. crisp air, fewer tour groups on Rue du Trésor. is a completely different and better experience than summer.
How to Book Hotels in Canada
Smart booking strategies that save money without sacrificing quality.
Skip the airport hotel trap in Toronto
Hotels near Toronto Pearson International in Mississauga run $150–250/night and put you 45 minutes from downtown on the UP Express train ($12.35 one way). You're paying almost the same as The Rex Hotel on Queen Street West but without any of the access or atmosphere. Land late, take the UP Express, and stay where the city actually is.
Book Quebec City's Château in October, not December
Fairmont Le Château Frontenac drops to $260–320/night in October versus $400–500/night in December and February. The foliage around the St. Lawrence River is at its peak, crowds are gone from Rue du Trésor, and the Plains of Abraham are actually walkable. December is romantic-looking in photos and expensive in practice. October gives you the same atmosphere for 35% less.
Vancouver's Canada Line is your best friend
The Canada Line SkyTrain runs from YVR airport to downtown Vancouver in 26 minutes for $9.45. skip the taxi at $45–60 for the same trip. From Waterfront Station, you're 8 minutes walk to Fairmont Pacific Rim on Canada Place Way or 10 minutes to Loden Hotel on Howe Street. Load a Compass Card at the airport and you're done for the whole trip.
Toronto's TTC day pass saves you more than you'd think
A TTC day pass costs $14.50 and covers unlimited rides on the subway, streetcar, and bus. From Fairmont Royal York at Union Station, you can reach Kensington Market on the 506 streetcar, the Distillery District on the 504 King, and Broadview Hotel's neighborhood in Riverside on the 501 Queen. all in under 25 minutes each. Don't bother with Uber for city exploration; TTC is faster during rush hour.
Montreal's hotel tax adds up. factor it in
Quebec's lodging tax runs 3.5% on top of the room rate, plus the standard 15% combined HST. At Hotel Le Germain on Mansfield Street, a $300/night room becomes roughly $355 all-in. That's not a reason to avoid it, but don't get caught adjusting your budget at checkout. Always look at the total-with-taxes price on Booking.com before you commit.
The Fairmont Pacific Rim breakfast is a trap. eat on Robson Street instead
Fairmont Pacific Rim's in-house breakfast runs $35–55 per person. Walk 4 minutes to Robson Street between Thurlow and Bute and you'll find better coffee and food for $12–18. Purebread Bakery on West Hastings Street in Gastown is 10 minutes walk and worth the detour. Save the Fairmont restaurant for dinner when the cocktail bar actually justifies the price.
Frequently Asked Questions About Hotels in Canada
Straight answers from our team after reviewing hotels across Canada.
What's the best hotel in Canada overall?
Fairmont Pacific Rim in Vancouver's Downtown Coal Harbour district is the standout. it scores 9.2 and sits a 5-minute walk from the Gastown Steam Clock. Rooms run $340–660/night, which is steep, but the service is genuinely faultless. If that's too rich, Loden Hotel on Howe Street is one block away and costs $240–460/night with nearly the same quality.
Which Canadian city has the best hotels?
Vancouver edges it out. Fairmont Pacific Rim and Loden Hotel both sit in the top tier, and you're 10 minutes from Stanley Park on foot. Toronto has more variety across price points, from $110/night at The Rex up to $420 at the Royal York. Quebec City wins for atmosphere, but the selection is smaller.
What's the cheapest good hotel in Canada on this list?
Samesun Vancouver on Granville Street starts at $60/night and scores 8.2. that's genuinely strong for a hostel. The Rex Hotel in Toronto's Entertainment District is the budget pick for private rooms, starting at $110/night with live jazz downstairs most nights. Both are 15 minutes or less from their city's main transit hubs.
When is the cheapest time to visit Canada?
January–February is the cheapest window across all four cities. expect $60–180/night for most of our picks versus $200–660/night in peak summer. Toronto and Montreal drop significantly, though temperatures hit –10°C to –20°C. Vancouver winters are milder, around 3–7°C, so it's actually decent value without the brutal cold.
Is Toronto or Vancouver more expensive for hotels?
Vancouver runs about 20–30% pricier for equivalent quality. Fairmont Pacific Rim at $340–660/night versus Fairmont Royal York in Toronto's Financial District at $220–420/night. That said, Toronto's Queen West neighborhood offers better mid-range value, with The Drake Hotel at $160–300/night in a genuinely cool area. Granville in Vancouver is cheaper but grittier.
What neighborhood should I stay in Toronto?
Queen West is our pick. The Drake Hotel puts you on Queen Street West, 12 minutes walk from Kensington Market and 8 minutes from the Art Gallery of Ontario. The Financial District works if you're there for business; Fairmont Royal York is literally attached to Union Station. Avoid the area around Dundas Square. overpriced hotels, generic chains, and nothing worth walking to.
What neighborhood should I stay in Vancouver?
Coal Harbour is the sweet spot. Loden Hotel on Howe Street puts you 8 minutes walk from Canada Place and 12 minutes from Gastown's Water Street. Granville is cheaper but the strip gets rowdy on weekends. Gastown itself is worth considering. Skwachàys Lodge on West Hastings is central and genuinely unique, scoring 8.5.
Is Fairmont Le Château Frontenac worth the price?
Yes, but go in on the right room. The castle sits on Cap Diamant overlooking the St. Lawrence River, and you're 3 minutes walk from Rue Saint-Louis in Old Quebec. At $260–500/night it's not a steal, but there's nothing else like it in Canada. maybe the world. Book a river-view room; the courtyard-facing ones aren't worth the rate.
How do I get around between Canadian cities?
Flying is the only realistic option between Toronto, Vancouver, and Quebec City. distances are 3,300+ km coast to coast. Toronto to Montreal is the exception: the Via Rail train takes about 5 hours from Union Station and costs $80–150 one way, which beats the airport hassle easily. Budget at least 45 minutes to get from Vancouver YVR to Coal Harbour by Canada Line SkyTrain.
Are there good design hotels in Canada?
Broadview Hotel in Toronto's Riverside neighborhood is the standout. converted Victorian building, rooftop bar with a direct view of the downtown skyline, and rooms from $180–340/night. Loden Hotel in Vancouver's Coal Harbour is sleek and polished, with design details that feel considered rather than performative. Both score above 8.7.
What's the best hotel for art lovers in Canada?
Skwachàys Lodge in Vancouver's Gastown is the obvious answer. it's Canada's first Indigenous arts hotel, with each room designed by a different First Nations artist from BC. Rooms start at $140/night, and you're 6 minutes walk from the Museum of Contemporary Art on Homer Street. The Drake Hotel in Toronto's Queen West also leans hard into the local art scene if you're eastbound.
Do Canadian hotels charge resort fees?
Some do, especially the Fairmont properties. budget an extra $30–50/night on top of the listed rate at Fairmont Royal York and Fairmont Pacific Rim for parking, Wi-Fi, or facility fees. Boutique spots like Loden and Broadview are cleaner on this front. Always check the full breakdown before confirming; the listed $340 at Pacific Rim can quietly become $390 with add-ons.
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