40 Best Restaurants in Canada

Hop Scotch Dinner Club

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Started as a pop-up restaurant by some of the city's most creative chefs, Hop Scotch has evolved into one of the city's most sophisticated dining rooms where incredible food and inventive cocktails are to be eagerly anticipated on each visit. The small menu changes often in order to showcase the best in seasonal, local ingredients, and brunch is always amazing. 

1537 Barrington St., Halifax, Nova Scotia, B3J 1Z4, Canada
902-420–9626
Known For
  • intimate and classy dining experience
  • delectable desserts such as their s'more tart
  • fantastic curated wine list
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch but brunch on weekends.

Mallard Cottage

$$$ Fodor's choice

Roaring fires, an open kitchen, and jars of homemade pickles lining the rafters set the scene in this renovated historic building in Quidi Vidi Village. The menu changes daily based on the best ingredients available from local sources and might include spit-roasted pork shoulder or tuna tartare, always accompanied by novel and succulent vegetable dishes. With an on-site sommelier, the wines and cocktails keep up with the food. On Sunday the restaurant has live music.

8 Barrows Rd., St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, A1A 1G8, Canada
709-237–7314
Known For
  • on-site sommelier
  • Sunday brunch with live music
  • fun beer garden
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues. Nov.–May, Reservations essential

The Nook and Cannery

$$ Fodor's choice

This easygoing diner does a bustling lunch service in large part due to the personality and creativity of its owner, locally known as an innovative and improvisational chef. Enjoy casual fare with surprising ingredients in a space decorated with an eclectic mix of family photos, bottled preserves, and tabletops repurposed from old furniture and signage. Vegan, gluten-free, and meat-based options are available in generous portions.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Bacalao

$$$

Sit back and relax in the cozy dining rooms of this converted old house and sample updated traditional fare. Bacalao, pronounced "back-allow," is Portuguese for "salted cod," a historic staple of Newfoundlanders and the Mediterraneans who came here to fish; a variation of it is featured every night. Other nouvelle-Newfoundland options include moose and caribou dishes, and mussels in Quidi Vidi Iceberg beer. Off-street parking keeps this spot attractive to its more suburban customer base.

65 Lemarchant Rd., St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, A1C 2G9, Canada
709-579–6565
Known For
  • <PRO>local ingredients</PRO>
  • <PRO>famed salted cod</PRO>
  • <PRO>convenient parking</PRO>
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon., Reservations essential, Credit cards accepted

Bagel Cafe

$$

The name belies the menu at this cozy spot on Duckworth Street where you can get excellent food for any meal of the day. Generous breakfast offerings bring local ingredients to traditional dishes. The with eclectic decor and soft lighting, the atmosphere is both relaxed and intimate. 

Best Coast Café

$$
This type of diner food (fresh comfort food with a certain international panache) is a rare find on the island. Tucked away in an easy-to-overlook retail spot in a small pedestrian shopping area, the extroverted and gracious staff serves some excellent breakfast and lunch options.
74 Broadway, Corner Brook, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada
709-639–7141
Known For
  • all-day breakfast
  • fresh soups, sandwiches, and tacos
  • homemade bread
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No dinner

Big Horn Cafe

$

So much more than a specialty coffee shop, Radium's only café offers a full selection of grab-and-go soup and sandwiches, breakfast burritos, quiche, and baked goods for breakfast and lunch. A bright, spacious room with high, open-duct industrial-style ceilings contrasts nicely with the warmth of the custom-made Douglas fir tabletops, plants throughout, and a wall filled with locally made BC products. Free Wi-Fi is available, as well as charging stations if you need to catch up on work or research. The outdoor patio (with umbrellas) is the perfect place to enjoy a beverage and people-watch.

7527 Main St. West, Radium, British Columbia, Canada
778-527--5005
Known For
  • grab-and-go breakfast and lunch
  • scones and cinnamon buns
  • breakfast special on weekends for C$9.95
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed December 24, 25, and 31st. No dinner

Café de l'Anse

$$

The magnificent patio, with its view of the ocean, is the place to sit while enjoying regional specialties. Sample seafood the way locals eat it, say codfish brandade, codfish balls, smoked fish or sausage, and seafood gratin. Flank steak and rabbit tartare are other possibilities. Desserts are homemade. Blond wood panels the open-space dining room, making for a cozy setting where the whole family feels welcome. The attached, nonprofit Centre culturel Le Griffon works to preserve local maritime culture.

Cafe Mount Robson

$

This café is a great place to enjoy coffee, tea, or ice cream, grab-and-go breakfasts, fine chocolates, or baked goods before or after a hike. There's also a variety of hot and cold sandwiches, pizza, hamburgers, stew, burgers, fries, and poutine. They even micro-roast organic fairly traded coffee beans in small batches, and you can have local beer or BC wine with your meal if you dine inside. There are picnic tables if you wish to dine outside and enjoy the magnificent scenery.

18344 Yellowhead Hwy., Mount Robson Provincial Park, British Columbia, V0E 2Z0, Canada
888-814--1600-toll-free
Known For
  • liquor-licensed restaurant
  • house-made pizza
  • good coffee
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed mid-Oct.--mid-Apr. No dinner.

Capers Pub & Eatery

$$
With an owner who also ships seafood you're guaranteed the finest fish—Atlantic salmon, Prince Edward Island mussels, and classic fish-and-chips share the menu with mains like whiskey peppercorn steak and a selection of pasta dishes. It doesn't end there, either, with a long list of burgers, salads, and even breakfasts, a lengthy drinks menu that includes craft beers and cocktails, and a schedule of live music.

Cliffhouse Bistro

$

Breakfast or lunch at this mountainside restaurant involves a ride up the sightseeing chairlift to a cool retro-style chalet. The food is delicious and unpretentious; brunch is served all day, the salads are meal-sized, and the nachos and the charcuterie board are great for sharing. Local craft beers, sodas, and Canadian wines are also on offer.

Communitea Cafe

$

More than 80 varieties of loose leaf teas, craft beverages, and artisan coffees are served alongside fresh, healthy, and local food at this downtown café. Look for pad Thai noodle bowls, rice bowls, salads, sandwiches, and delicious wraps. There are many vegan, vegetarian, and gluten-free options on the menu as well.

Creekers Bistro

$

Located in the back corner of a shopping mall, this family-run restaurant has a casual menu, a kids menu, and a pet-friendly patio. Along with burgers and pizza, you'll find steaks, shrimp, salmon, ribs, and a few specialties like bibimbap and bulgogi (the owners immigrated from South Korea). The restaurant has specials that are served before 5 pm. There are five craft beers on tap and six wine choices.

Dolly's Fish Market

$$

A local institution, this seafood market and restaurant serves the freshest seafood with a no-frills attitude. Nothing gourmet here, just straightforward, well-prepared fish and (crispy) fries, along with other deep-fried favorites: halibut, shrimp, scallops, and smoked salmon. For those who don't like it fried, the crab cakes and chowders come highly recommended. They even offer gluten-free selections. Although there are one or two pricier options, like a whole Dungeness crab at $39.95, most prices are reasonable across the board, with a $5.95 children's menu that's hard to beat. While early dinner is served, the restaurant closes at 8 pm.

7 Cow Bay Rd., Prince Rupert, British Columbia, V8J 1A5, Canada
250-624–6090
Known For
  • <PRO>crab cakes</PRO>
  • <PRO>chowder</PRO>
  • <PRO>early dinner (closing time is 8 pm)</PRO>
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Reservations essential

Farm & Fire

$
Canadian flair is the hallmark of this modern, airy restaurant—a recent addition to the Elk + Avenue Hotel—where ingredients sourced from small, local, organic farmers are used in appetizers such as barbecue "pig wings" (made from pork shanks and served with celery and buttermilk-blue-cheese dressing) and entrees like slow-roasted rotisserie chicken, mushroom orecchiette pasta, and flatbread pizza. The drinks menu features Canadian wines, local craft beers, and unique cocktails made using the best Canadian spirits. Brunch includes classic breakfast dishes and cocktails as well as breakfast bowls and sandwiches.

Forte

$$

Open for breakfast, lunch, and dinner, the restaurant is known for locally sourced ingredients that are used in their delicious wood-fired pizzas and house-made pasta, creative salads, seafood and chicken dishes, and Alberta beef steaks; there's also an excellent breakfast buffet. The dining area includes a long bar, an open kitchen, and expansive windows with gorgeous mountain views along one side of the restaurant. A few vegetarian and gluten-free options are available and children under six eat free.

Galaxie Diner

$ | Beltline

A small all-day breakfast place that has been around for more than 25 years, the Galaxie Diner is a great option for a fair-priced breakfast (especially if you slept past noon). The decor is vintage diner, the staff is friendly and helpful, and you can have as many hash browns as you like.

1413 11th St. SW, Calgary, Alberta, Canada
403-228--0001
Known For
  • old-school diner vibe
  • all-day breakfast
  • almost always a line
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No dinner

Georgetown Pub

$

This spot resembles an old English pub in every way, including having a red phone booth and the best fish-and-chips in town. Other British pub classics like Scotch eggs, bangers and mash, stuffed Yorkshire pudding, shepherd's pie, and beef Wellington are on the menu alongside Canadian favorites like salads, burgers, poutine, and steak sandwiches. The breakfast menu is also very good. The bar is one of the biggest in Canmore with more than a dozen beers on tap as well as a nice selection of cocktails, spirits, ciders, and wines. FYI: The Georgetown is named after a ghost town not far from Canmore.

Green Kitchen

$$

Enjoy your vegan meal in this relaxing atmosphere with hardwood floors and natural lighting. This casual eatery offers plant-based fare with most elements made from scratch with ethically sourced ingredients. 

47 Harvey Rd., St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, A1C 2E9, Canada
709-237–2223
Known For
  • delicious and healthy smoothies
  • vegan children's menu
  • cozy Sunday brunch
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon.

Juniper Bistro

$
Ask for a table on the engaging patio or inside near one of the dining room's walls of windows to enjoy some of Banff's best views while dining on dishes made from fresh local ingredients. The brunch menu features stuffed French toast, huevos rancheros, and several kinds of eggs Benedict; lunch options include burgers, sandwiches, and pulled-pork poutine. Many dishes can be made gluten-free, vegetarian, or both.
1 Juniper Way, Banff, Alberta, T1L 1E1, Canada
403-762–2281
Known For
  • popular brunch spot
  • great views, indoors and out
  • gluten-free and vegetarian options
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No dinner Mon.-Tues.

Lake House Café

$$

This cafeteria-style café located just off Maligne Lake is a great spot to get a picnic to go or to relax and eat in. The regionally sourced menu has a wide variety of sandwiches, salads, soup, chili, hot dogs, and three different kinds of poutine, a Canadian indulgence made with potato wedges, cheese curds, and gravy. There's also a small children's menu.

Moon Water Lodge

$$
Step into this log-frame house near the Malahat summit, about 30 minutes north of Victoria, and you'll discover stunningly beautiful, birds-eye views over Finlayson Arm and the Gulf Islands. Open all day, the restaurant is all about local, hormone-free and organic fare alongside comfort-food favorites as well as house-made take-away treats,. Breakfast offers traditional favorites such as eggs benny; lunch selections list casual fare such as burgers, homemade soups and imaginative salads like Roast Beet Quinoa; dinner brings more contemporary meat and seafood dishes: Tuscan style pork chops, apple smoked back ribs, and a mixed seafood linguini. Many items are less that C$15, especially on the Fit & Fab health-conscious menu. The scenery is especially striking from the large outdoor deck, perched 600 feet over Saanich Inlet. If you're tempted to linger, consider staying over in one of the very comfortable rooms.

Morris East

$$

Casually cool yet warm and intimate, Morris East stakes its reputation on local artisanal ingredients. Gourmet wood-fired pizzas, topped with the region's best veggies, cheeses, and charcuterie and cooked using Annapolis Valley applewood, are the specialty. Libations have local flavor too: spirits handcrafted in the province go into the cocktails. There's a short wine list, or you can bring your own (corkage C$15).

5212 Morris St., Halifax, Nova Scotia, B3J 1B4, Canada
902-444–7663
Known For
  • <PRO>innovative pizza toppings</PRO>
  • <PRO>artisanal cocktails</PRO>
  • <PRO>good value lunch specials</PRO>
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Reservations not accepted

Park Distillery

$$$
With water from six Canadian Rockies glaciers and grain sourced from high-altitude family farms, Park Distillery produces spirits with aromas and flavors like no others. Its restaurant features a fun campfire-cuisine theme with classic coleslaw, warm potato salad, or mac and cheese served alongside rotisserie chicken, salmon, ribs, burgers, or steaks. There's a nice selection of vegan and gluten-free options as well. Sprawling over two floors, the restaurant has picnic tables and wall decorations that look right out of a kids' summer camp, though the lively main-floor bar reminds patrons of the grown-up pleasures to be enjoyed.
219 Banff Ave., Banff, Alberta, T1L 1A7, Canada
403-762–5114
Known For
  • Banff's first and only distillery restaurant
  • dining room has a playful, summer-camp vibe
  • distillery tours and tastings daily at 3:30

Portland Street Crêperie

$ | Dartmouth

Here you'll find sweet and savory crepes with unexpected fillings such as garlic mashed potato, or pesto with goat cheese and chicken, as well as classic flavors.

River Café

$$$$ | Eau Claire

Inspired by the natural surroundings of Prince's Island Park, on Bow River, this restaurant has the look of a fishing lodge. The exquisite regional Canadian cuisine includes Northwest Territories caribou, British Columbia oysters and Pacific salmon, Alberta Black Angus beef, and Alberta lamb. The wine list has earned Wine Spectator's Award of Excellence since 1997. With 24-hours advance notice, the restaurant can prepare you a picnic basket to enjoy in the park.

Summit Café

$

Near the top of Whistlers Mountain, spectacular views and casual dining are the big draws at this restaurant that is operated by the Jasper Skytram. It's a good spot for breakfast, lunch, or possibly an early dinner---depending on the season---as casual Canadian-style sandwiches, burgers, wraps, soups, and salads are served with beer, wine, coolers and soft drinks.

Jasper Skytram, Jasper National Park, Alberta, Canada
780-852--3093
Known For
  • incredible views
  • breakfast and lunch sandwiches
  • healthy salads
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sept.--Mar.

Sunhouse Cafe

$

If you want a taste of Australian café culture, this is the place, with six types of coffee, a variety of organic teas, kombucha, and healthy smoothies. The food menu includes breakfast sandwiches and bowls, sausage rolls, apple-cider loaf, and other nibbles. The view is lovely from the sunny second-floor terrace.

Taverne Louise

$$$ | Lower Town
As a nod to Queen Victoria's slightly rebellious fourth daughter, who happened to adore Québec City, Taverne Louise aims to please with its two distinct areas: one that's more laid-back and casual, with local beers on tap, and the other slightly more upscale with a regiment of tapas and privately imported wines. The space, with exposed stone and large ancestral windows, is the perfect backdrop for the restaurant's now iconic foie gras au torchon and a glass of rosé Lambrusco.

Ten Foot Henry

$$$ | Beltline

Named after a ten-foot replica of the 1930s comic character, which you’ll meet on the way to the washroom, this fresh veggie-centric eatery offers family-style dining in an airy space enhanced by lush green plants. This is not your average salad shop as Chef Steve Smee’s talents in the kitchen have earned Ten Foot Henry’s a spot as one of the top 50 restaurants in Canada. Sit in front of the open kitchen and try the warmed tomatoes and herbs on sourdough toast and the vegetarian cacio e pepe pasta. Meat eaters can rest easy, as the menu includes numerous seafood options and, yes, a steak. A weekend brunch is served from 11 am to 2 pm.