Mowando

ville historique

Quebec City

Only fortified city north of Mexico still intact, UNESCO Old Quebec since 1985, founded in 1608 by Samuel de Champlain — the most European of North American cities, direct heir to New France.

4.80Québec

Quebec City, capital of the province of the same name (550,000 inhabitants with suburbs), is the only fortified city north of Mexico still intact and one of North America's oldest cities — founded by Samuel de Champlain in 1608, six years before the creation of the Company of One Hundred Associates. Its Old Quebec (upper and lower town) has been UNESCO-listed since 1985 — a maze of paved alleys, shaded squares and historic monuments of rare architectural coherence, where you'd think you were in a medieval European city transposed to the heart of the American continent.

The city is organised on two distinct levels. The upper town (Cap-Diamant, 100 m strategic cliff overlooking the St Lawrence River), surrounded by 4.6 km of historic ramparts (the only ones remaining north of Mexico), houses the iconic Château Frontenac (Fairmont, 1893, the world's most photographed hotel according to a 2014 Hilton study, its neo-Renaissance towers dominate the skyline), the Dufferin Terrace (wooden promenade facing the river, Château ice slides in winter, summer kiosks), the Plains of Abraham (98-ha historic park, site of the decisive 1759 battle where English General Wolfe defeated French Marquis Montcalm — defeat that sealed the end of New France), the Citadelle de Québec (1820-1850 star-shaped fortress, North America's largest active fortress, official residence of Canada's Governor General, daily changing of the guard in summer 10am), and Porte Saint-Louis (monumental entrance through the ramparts).

The lower town, accessible by the iconic funicular (CAD 4, 64 m drop) or the Breakneck Stairs, concentrates the historic origins of the city. Place Royale is the first permanent French settlement in North America (1608, Louis XIV statue in the centre, Notre-Dame-des-Victoires church from 1688, North America's oldest stone church). The Petit Champlain Quarter (North America's oldest commercial street, founded 1685) is one of the most charming districts on the continent — narrow paved alleys, stone façades, artisan shops, cafés, traditional restaurants. The Fresque des Québécois (1999, monumental 420 m² trompe-l'œil telling Quebec's history) and the Museum of Civilisation (one of Canada's best history and Indigenous cultures museums) complete the lower town experience.

The Quebec experience is lived in a unique atmosphere in North America — 95% francophone (the continent's most francophone city), vibrant traditions (Carnival since 1894, Summer Festival since 1968), authentic Quebec gastronomy (Aux Anciens Canadiens in a 1675 house for tourtière, pâté chinois, ragoût de pattes de cochon, sugar pie, all washed down with Caribou — traditional alcoholic drink), accent and Quebec expressions more pronounced than in Montreal. Plan 2-3 nights minimum to grasp Old Quebec — the compact city walks well, without useful car downtown.

What we love

  • UNESCO Old Quebec 1985: only fortified city north of Mexico still intact, founded 1608
  • Château Frontenac: world's most photographed hotel, Dufferin Terrace with St Lawrence view
  • Place Royale (1608) and Petit Champlain (1685, North America's oldest commercial street)
  • Quebec Carnival (1st fortnight of February, world's largest winter carnival)
  • North America's most francophone city (95%), unique European atmosphere

What to know

  • Tourist saturation: Old Quebec packed in July-August (up to 6,000 cruise passengers/day at peak)
  • Hotel rates rise sharply in high season (Château Frontenac CAD 500-1,200/night)
  • Extreme winters: -16/-7 °C average, specific gear essential (-25 °C minimum)
  • Less gastronomic and festival-rich than Montreal (more traditional)

Situation

Où se situe Quebec City ?

Ouvrir la carte en grand sur OpenStreetMap →

Frequently asked questions

How many days for Quebec City?+
Minimum 2 nights for Old Quebec (upper and lower town), Plains of Abraham, Citadelle. 3 comfortable nights adding an excursion: Montmorency Falls (15 min away, 83 m high, higher than Niagara, accessible by cable car CAD 17), Île d'Orléans (scenic 67 km route around the island, orchards, vineyards, sugar shacks), Sainte-Anne-de-Beaupré Basilica (major pilgrimage site), Mont-Sainte-Anne (skiing in winter, downhill biking in summer). In 10-14 days in Quebec, combine Montreal (4 nights) + Quebec City (3 nights) + Charlevoix-Tadoussac (3-4 nights, whales mid-May to late October).
Where to stay in Old Quebec?+
Upper town for view and iconic: Fairmont Le Château Frontenac (5*, CAD 500-1,200/night, world's most photographed hotel), Hôtel Manoir Victoria (4* historic, CAD 250-400), Hôtel Clarendon (Quebec's oldest hotel, 1858, CAD 180-280), Hôtel du Vieux-Québec (4*, CAD 220-350). Lower town for intimate charm: Auberge Saint-Antoine (5* Relais & Châteaux, CAD 350-650, integrated with a 17th-century archaeological site), Hôtel 71 (4* design in the 1875 Royal Bank, CAD 250-400), Hôtel Le Saint-Pierre (boutique, CAD 200-350). Mid-range / budget: Auberge Internationale de Québec (HI, CAD 50-80/dorm bed, CAD 130-200 private room, ideal Saint-Ursule location), Auberge Place d'Armes (4*, CAD 180-280). Avoid hotels outside the walls (Sainte-Foy, Vanier) if you want to live the Old Quebec experience.
When to come to Quebec Carnival?+
The Quebec Carnival runs for 17 days — from the last Friday of January to the second Sunday of February (exact dates variable, check carnaval.qc.ca). It's the world's largest winter carnival (1st edition in 1894, modern version since 1955), with 200,000 visitors and the famous Bonhomme Carnaval (mascot in white costume) as iconic figure. Main activities: Bonhomme's ice palace (National Assembly square, monumental sculpture), ice canoe races on the frozen St Lawrence (spectacular competition between Quebec, Montreal, Trois-Rivières teams), Bonhomme night parade (two Saturdays, 5 km costumed parade), snow sculpture competition, motorcycle ice drifting, outdoor shows, Dufferin Terrace slides. Mandatory gear: -25 °C parka, thermal underwear, beanie, thick gloves, winter boots, and the Bonhomme effigy (CAD 15, access to all sites).
What's the difference between Quebec City and Quebec (province)?+
It's a classic source of confusion. Quebec (province) is one of Canada's 10 provinces — 8.7 million inhabitants, 1.5 million km², the country's largest province. Its capital is Quebec (city) (and not Montreal, which is the largest city but not the capital). To distinguish: people say "province of Quebec" or "Quebec (province)" for the territory, and "Quebec City" or "Quebec (city)" for the capital. Quebecers (inhabitants of the province or the city depending on context) often speak of "Quebec" alone to mean the city when they live there. Our advice for European visitors: a 10-14 day trip generally combines Montreal (the metropolis) + Quebec City (the historic capital) + Charlevoix-Tadoussac (nature and whales) to live the province in all its dimensions.
Should I climb to the top of Château Frontenac?+
No for the view (the Château is a hotel, not a public observation tower), yes for the experience. The Fairmont Le Château Frontenac (1893, world's most photographed hotel) is open to the public for: historic guided tour (50 min, CAD 27/person, several daily departures, tells 130 years of history including the 1944 Quebec Conference where Roosevelt, Churchill and Mackenzie King prepared D-Day), afternoon tea at Place Dufferin (CAD 35-45/person), cocktail at 1608 (champagne bar, CAD 18-25), dinner at Champlain Restaurant (gastronomic, CAD 80-130/person). For the best view of the Château and the river: Dufferin Terrace (free, attached to the Château, wooden platform), Old Quebec funicular (at the foot of the Château, CAD 4 for the descent to Petit Champlain), Quebec-Lévis ferry (CAD 10-15 return, 12 min, spectacular view of the Old Quebec skyline from the south shore, especially at sunset).

Our verdict

Quebec City is the most European of North American cities — UNESCO Old Quebec since 1985, only fortified city north of Mexico still intact, founded by Samuel de Champlain in 1608. It's the essential historical stop of a Quebec trip, to absolutely combine with Montreal and Charlevoix-Tadoussac. Our advice: 2-3 nights minimum in Old Quebec — stay in the upper town (Château Frontenac for luxury, Hôtel Manoir Victoria for mid-range, Auberge Saint-Antoine for boutique in lower town) to enjoy the district in the morning before cruise passengers arrive (10-11am) and in the evening after they leave (5-6pm). Visit the Plains of Abraham, the Citadelle (daily changing of the guard in summer 10am), descend by funicular to Petit Champlain (North America's oldest commercial street), taste tourtière at Aux Anciens Canadiens (1675). Prefer June to September for climate (but book 3-4 months ahead) or February for the Quebec Carnival (world's largest winter carnival) — but plan -25 °C gear. VIA Rail train Montreal-Quebec in 3h, CAD 50-100 return.

Nearby

The Editors
The Editorsauteur principal✓ Verified

"Janvier : pic du froid (-16/-7 °C), neige abondante (90 mm). Préparation au Carnaval."

Expert on Quebec City · 1 contributions

Mowando Letter

Once a month: the right destinations for the right season + the best booking windows.

No spam. One-click unsubscribe. Your data is never shared.