Canada is a country of enormous contrasts. In a single afternoon you can cross a prairie horizon that looks like it was drawn with a ruler, climb a mountain pass locked in July snow, and eat fresh snow crab off a dock where the fishermen still speak a French that hasn't changed much since the 1700s.

No one page, and no one writer, could pretend to sum that up. What we've tried to do on All Canada is something more modest but, we hope, more useful: give every province and territory its own home, give the cities inside them real attention, and answer the specific questions people actually ask before they visit, move, study, or settle in.

Everything on this site is written in-house. We don't pull boilerplate from tourism boards, and we don't run AI-generated filler. When we say a neighbourhood is worth walking through, someone on the editorial team has walked through it. When we describe the cost of a one-bedroom apartment, we've checked listings in the last quarter. Canada is changing fast — rents in Halifax, transit in Ottawa, immigration caps in every province — so pages are reviewed at least twice a year and dated at the bottom.

If you're planning a trip, start with our travel tips for a quick orientation to seasons, money and moving between regions. If you're curious about a specific place, jump straight to its province below. If you want to understand why Canadians talk about the country the way they do — a federation of distinct regions more than a uniform nation — keep reading.

A Quick Orientation

Canada is a federation of ten provinces and three territories, stretching 5,500 kilometres from the Atlantic to the Pacific and another 4,600 kilometres north from the 49th parallel to Ellesmere Island. Roughly 41 million people live here, but more than 80 percent of them live within 150 kilometres of the United States border. The rest of the country — the boreal forest, the tundra, the Arctic archipelago — is some of the emptiest land on the planet.

The federation isn't uniform. Each province sets its own laws on education, health care, property, alcohol, tenancy, and much more. Quebec uses civil law; the rest of the country uses common law. A driver's licence from New Brunswick works in Saskatchewan, but the rules of the road, the speed limits, and even the way you turn left on a green arrow can differ. Understanding Canada means understanding its regions, not just the federal government in Ottawa.

Aerial view of a Canadian boreal lake at sunrise with mist rising off the water
Boreal forest covers more than half of Canada's landmass — a horizon of black spruce, lakes and granite that shapes how the country thinks about itself.

Explore Canada — Click Any Province or Territory

The map below uses real geography. Click any province or territory to jump straight to its guide.

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Explore the Provinces & Territories

Click any card below for a guide to that province or territory, including major cities, neighbourhoods, history, economy, education, housing, sport, food, and answers to the questions travellers and newcomers ask most often.

Toronto skyline with CN Tower

Ontario

Capital: Toronto · Pop. ~15.9M

Canada's most populous province and economic engine. Toronto, Ottawa, Hamilton, Niagara, Kingston, Windsor, Thunder Bay and the cottage country in between.

Read the Ontario guide →
Old Quebec City with its historic walls and Chateau Frontenac

Quebec

Capital: Quebec City · Pop. ~8.9M

French-speaking, civil-law, and culturally distinct. Montreal, Quebec City, Gatineau, Sherbrooke, Saguenay and the Laurentians.

Read the Quebec guide →
Vancouver skyline with mountains and harbour

British Columbia

Capital: Victoria · Pop. ~5.6M

Mountains meet the Pacific. Vancouver, Victoria, Whistler, Kelowna, Tofino and a coastline of fjords, ferries and old-growth forest.

Read the BC guide →
Moraine Lake in Banff National Park, Alberta

Alberta

Capital: Edmonton · Pop. ~4.8M

Oil, ranchland and the Rockies. Calgary, Edmonton, Banff, Jasper, Lethbridge — and Canada's only province with no provincial sales tax.

Read the Alberta guide →
Winnipeg Exchange District and prairie skyline

Manitoba

Capital: Winnipeg · Pop. ~1.5M

The Keystone Province — grain elevators, polar bears at Churchill, a serious arts scene in Winnipeg, and some of the coldest winters on the continent.

Read the Manitoba guide →
Saskatchewan prairie wheat fields under a wide open sky

Saskatchewan

Capital: Regina · Pop. ~1.23M

Wide open prairie, agriculture and potash. Saskatoon, Regina, and the living-skies landscape Canadian painters keep coming back to.

Read the Saskatchewan guide →
Peggy's Cove lighthouse Nova Scotia at golden hour

Nova Scotia

Capital: Halifax · Pop. ~1.05M

A peninsula that feels like an island. Halifax, the Cabot Trail, Peggy's Cove, and a 400-year history tied to the sea.

Read the Nova Scotia guide →
Hopewell Rocks on the Bay of Fundy, New Brunswick

New Brunswick

Capital: Fredericton · Pop. ~850K

Canada's only officially bilingual province. Fundy tides, Acadian villages, covered bridges and Saint John's quiet downtown.

Read the New Brunswick guide →
St. John's Newfoundland colourful row houses on Signal Hill

Newfoundland & Labrador

Capital: St. John's · Pop. ~533K

Canada's most easterly province, and arguably its most distinctive. Icebergs off the Avalon Peninsula, outport fishing villages, and a culture with its own music, dialect and pace.

Read the Newfoundland & Labrador guide →
Red sand cliffs and beaches of Prince Edward Island

Prince Edward Island

Capital: Charlottetown · Pop. ~170K

Canada's smallest province punches above its weight: red-sand beaches, world-class oysters, the birthplace of Confederation, and Green Gables country.

Read the PEI guide →
Yukon wilderness with Northern Lights over a mountain lake

Yukon

Capital: Whitehorse · Pop. ~45K

Gold rush country and northern wilderness. The Klondike, Kluane National Park, the midnight sun, and skies that erupt in aurora all winter long.

Read the Yukon guide →
Northwest Territories Aurora Borealis over a frozen lake

Northwest Territories

Capital: Yellowknife · Pop. ~45K

Diamond mines and boreal silence. Yellowknife is one of the world's best places to watch the northern lights, and the territory's rivers draw paddlers from across the globe.

Read the NWT guide →
Arctic tundra and sea ice in Nunavut

Nunavut

Capital: Iqaluit · Pop. ~40K

Canada's youngest and largest territory. An Inuit homeland of sea ice, polar bears, narwhals and a landscape that has barely changed since the last ice age.

Read the Nunavut guide →