Best Things to Do in Quebec (Province) (2026 Guide)

Quebec is Canada's French-speaking province — a vast territory from the St. Lawrence River cities of Quebec City and Montreal to the wilderness of the Laurentian highlands, the whale-watching shores of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, and the Gaspe Peninsula's dramatic Percé Rock. Quebec City's UNESCO-listed Old Town is the only walled city north of Mexico, while Montreal is Canada's most culturally rich and gastronomically adventurous city. This guide covers the best things to do in Quebec Province across its extraordinary range.

Find Things to Do →
Quebec

The unmissable in Quebec

These are the staple sights — don't leave Quebec without seeing them.

1
Mount Royal
#1 must-see

Mount Royal

📍 Quebec, Montreal, H3H 1A2
🕐 Mon–Sun Open 24h
Explore →

Destinations in Quebec

Montreal

Montreal

Montreal is Canada's most culturally dynamic city — a bilingual French-English metropolis of 2 million on an island…

Explore →
Quebec City

Quebec City

Quebec City is the only walled city north of Mexico in North America and one of the continent's…

Explore →

More attractions in Quebec

Mount Royal 1
#1 must-see

Mount Royal

Explore →

📍 Quebec, Montreal, H3H 1A2

Mount Royal is the modest hill — barely 233 metres — that gives Montreal its name and its defining geographical reference. From its summit, the city spreads in every direction: the downtown towers to the south, the St. Lawrence River curving toward the horizon, and the Laurentian foothills visible on clear days to the north. Frederick Law Olmsted, who designed Central Park in New York, laid out the park’s paths and meadows in the 1870s, and the results share the same blend of naturalistic landscape and accessible civic space.

The park contains two summits: the main belvedere above the chalet, which offers the most expansive downtown views, and a second lower point near the Smith House visitor centre. Beaver Lake, a man-made pond at the park’s centre, draws picnickers in summer and skaters in winter. The large steel cross on the summit is visible from across the city and commemorates a wooden cross planted by the city’s founder, Paul Chomedey de Maisonneuve, in 1643. The park also borders two significant cemeteries — Notre-Dame-des-Neiges and Mount Royal Cemetery — which together contain monuments spanning Montreal’s full history.

The park is used by Montrealers year-round. Summer Sunday gatherings on the lower slopes called the Tam-Tams draw large crowds of drummers and dancers. Winter brings cross-country skiers and tobogganers. The chalet belvedere is busiest at sunset; weekday mornings are calm. The park is easily reached by foot from downtown or by bus.

Mount Royal’s significance to Montreal is as much social as geographical — it functions as the city’s central park, backyard, and landmark simultaneously, a green anchor in a dense urban environment that has shaped the character of the neighborhoods arranged around its base.

See all things to do in Quebec

Compare tours, check availability, and book with free cancellation.

The best things to do in Quebec Province begin with its two great cities. Quebec City’s Old Town (Vieux-Québec) — the only fortified city north of Mexico in North America, entirely UNESCO World Heritage Listed — has the Chateau Frontenac (the world’s most photographed hotel), the Plains of Abraham battlefield park (where the 1759 Battle of Quebec decided the continent’s language), and the lower town’s Quartier Petit-Champlain (one of North America’s oldest commercial districts). Montreal’s cultural richness rivals any city in North America: the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, the Quartier des Spectacles arts district, the underground city (RESO, 33 km of climate-controlled passages), and a food scene that consistently produces Canada’s most exciting restaurants (Joe Beef, Tiradito, Maison Boulud) are highlights. The Laurentian Mountains north of Montreal — ski resorts at Mont-Tremblant, summer hiking, and the Parc National du Mont-Tremblant — are accessible year-round.

Best time to visit

Quebec has four distinct seasons, each with merits. Summer (June-August): warm (25-30°C in Montreal), peak outdoor season, the Montreal Jazz Festival (late June-July, one of the world’s largest), and the Festival d’été de Québec (July, free outdoor concerts). Autumn (September-October): the most spectacular foliage in North America, particularly in the Laurentians, Eastern Townships, and Charlevoix. Winter (December-March): Quebec Carnival (February, the world’s largest winter carnival), dogsledding in the Laurentians, ice skating on the Plains of Abraham, and the Ice Hotel (Hôtel de Glace) rebuilt each January near Quebec City. Spring (April-May): maple syrup season (sugar shacks, or cabanes à sucre, open for traditional maple meals in March-April).

Getting around

Montreal-Trudeau International Airport and Quebec City Jean Lesage Airport are the main gateways. VIA Rail connects Montreal and Quebec City (3.5 hours). Within Montreal, the STM metro (4 lines) and bus network covers all areas. Quebec City’s Old Town is walkable; the funicular connects upper and lower town for a fee. A rental car is essential for the Laurentians, Charlevoix, and the Gaspésie — no meaningful public transit serves these regions. The Route des Saveurs (Charlevoix’s culinary road) and the Route Verte cycling network (5,000 km of bike paths across Quebec) are excellent for self-directed exploration.

What to eat and drink

Quebec has one of Canada’s most distinctive food cultures. Poutine (fries, cheese curds, and gravy) originated in Quebec in the 1950s — the best in Montreal is at La Banquise on Rachel Street East (open 24 hours). Quebec’s sugar shack tradition (cabane à sucre) produces maple syrup, ham baked in maple, maple taffy pulled onto snow, and maple tire — open in March-April. Tourtiere (meat pie, traditional at Christmas) and cretons (pork rillettes spread) are Quebec classics. Montreal smoked meat at Schwartz’s Hebrew Delicatessen on Saint-Laurent Boulevard (open since 1928, consistently the city’s most debated queue) is non-negotiable. The SAQ (Société des alcools du Québec) wine selection is strong; Quebec craft cider from Hemmingford in the Eastern Townships is worth seeking out.

Areas to explore

Old Quebec City (Vieux-Québec) — The Chateau Frontenac, the Plains of Abraham, the Citadelle (Changing of the Guard, summer), Place Royale in the lower town (the Maison Chevalier, Quebec’s oldest commercial building), and the Quartier Petit-Champlain pedestrian shopping street.

Montreal’s Plateau-Mont-Royal / Mile End — The most characterful Montreal neighbourhood. Fairmount Bagel and St-Viateur Bagel (24-hour, the Montreal bagel debate mirrors New York’s), Schwartz’s smoked meat, and the Parc du Mont-Royal (Frederick Olmsted’s 1876 design, with an extraordinary city panorama from the lookout).

Laurentian Mountains / Mont-Tremblant — The Parc du Mont-Tremblant, the pedestrian village at the base of the ski mountain, and the Diable River kayaking. 90 minutes north of Montreal.

Charlevoix — The St. Lawrence River valley north of Quebec City: Baie-Saint-Paul (arts scene, the Gallery of Art Foundry), La Malbaie (Fairmont Le Manoir Richelieu’s casino and golf), and Tadoussac at the Saguenay fjord entrance for whale watching. 2 hours north of Quebec City.

Eastern Townships (Éstrie) — Quebec’s wine and cider region, 90 minutes east of Montreal. Dunham’s wine route, the Sutton ski area, and the textile history museum in Sherbrooke.

Gaspésie / Percé Rock — The Gaspé Peninsula’s Percé Rock (a natural limestone arch emerging from the Gulf of St. Lawrence), Bonaventure Island’s gannet colony, and Parc National de la Gaspésie’s Chic-Choc Mountains. 8 hours from Quebec City.

Frequently asked questions

What are the best things to do in Quebec Province?

The best things to do in Quebec include Quebec City's Old Town and Plains of Abraham, Montreal's food scene and museums, autumn foliage in the Laurentians and Charlevoix, whale watching at Tadoussac, maple syrup season at a sugar shack, and the February Quebec Carnival.

How many days do I need in Quebec?

Three days for Quebec City. Three to four days for Montreal. Add two days for the Laurentians or Charlevoix. A full week covers both cities plus a regional excursion. The Gaspésie is a separate 3-5 day road trip.

Is Quebec safe for tourists?

Yes, Quebec is very safe. Quebec City is one of North America's safest tourist cities. Montreal requires standard urban awareness in entertainment districts late at night.

What is the best time to visit Quebec?

September-October for foliage. February for Quebec Carnival. July for Montreal Jazz Festival and Festival d'été. March-April for maple syrup season. Each season is genuinely worth visiting.

How do I get around Quebec?

VIA Rail between Montreal and Quebec City. STM metro in Montreal. A rental car is essential for regional exploration. Quebec City's Old Town is walkable.

Is Quebec expensive?

Montreal is moderately priced by North American standards and represents excellent value for the quality of its food culture. Quebec City's Old Town accommodation can be expensive in peak summer. Rural Quebec (Charlevoix, Laurentians) has good-value guesthouses and auberges.

What are hidden gems in Quebec?

The Saguenay Fjord National Park — a 100 km fjord that is one of the southernmost fjords in the world, accessible by kayak or cruise boat from Chicoutimi — is extraordinary and little-visited internationally. The Parc national de la Gatineau across the Ottawa River from Ottawa has some of Canada's finest fall colour cycling. Ile d'Orléans, just east of Quebec City, is an agricultural island of farms, artisan producers, and cider houses that exists in a time warp just 15 minutes from the urban centre.