1031 Best Restaurants in Canada

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We've compiled the best of the best in Canada - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Blue Parrot Coffee

$ Fodor's Choice

Granville Island has several coffee places, but only the Blue Parrot provides sweeping views of False Creek. If you haven't eaten your fill elsewhere in the market, accompany your espresso with a sticky hot strudel or gooey cinnamon bun. Early birds, take note: you can perch at the Parrot starting at 7 am, before the rest of the market stalls open. There's a second location at Hillcrest Centre, near Queen Elizabeth Park.

Blue Willow Tea Shop

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

The dozen or so petite tables are set with blue-willow-pattern china in this quaint teahouse serving traditional English fare on the Muskoka Wharf. High tea—a three-tier platter of shortbread, scones with Devonshire cream, petit fours, and classic (crustless) cucumber sandwiches (with gluten-free options), plus a pot of tea per person—is served every afternoon.

Bonavista Social Club

$$ Fodor's Choice

The name implies more than just a restaurant and it is: a view, a respite, a community. From a table inside, you can watch pizzas cook in a wood-fired oven while sitting on handcrafted wooden furniture. On the deck, the views of the sea and gardens and farms surrounding the restaurant are unimpeded. This has fast become a locals' and travelers' favorite, and you are likely to bump into a friend here, even on your first visit. Located in Upper Amherst Cove just off Route 235, it is a short drive out from Bonavista.

7 Longshore Rd., Bonavista, A0C 2A0, Canada
709-704–6822
Known For
  • Gorgeous views
  • Farm-to-table fare
  • Classic wood-fired pizza
Restaurant Details
Closed Oct.–May

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Recommended Fodor's Video

Boom + Batten

$$$ | Vic West Fodor's Choice

Located along the Songhees Westsong Walkway, adjacent to the new Victoria International Marina, the views match the food at this waterfront restaurant. Its bakery-café offers sweet and savory treats for walkers and coffee aficionados, and the restaurant menu is a combination of charcuterie boards and terrines for sharing, wood-fired-oven pizzas, raw options like scallop with pickled beet citrus vinaigrette, marinated octopus and ceviches, as well as pastas and imaginative takes on classics such as duck Bolognese. The entire space is bold and modern with floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the Inner Harbour from an outer harbor vantage—provided there isn't a multimillion-dollar yacht in the sightline. Late night munchies? This is the spot. Picnicking? Then order a Boom Box (for delivery or pick up) filled with culinary delights.

Boulangerie Hof Kelsten

$ Fodor's Choice

The mastermind behind this photogenic bakery had been making bread for Montréal's best restaurants for years before he decided to open up his own place. His own shop is a favorite with locals, who line up every weekend for fresh baguettes. In addition to serving a delicious rye-and-caraway-seed loaf and chocolate babka, Hof Kelsten also makes sandwiches—like homemade gravlax with seasoned cream cheese or chopped liver with crispy onions—that make for an excellent lunch or early evening meal (the shop closes at 5). The bakery serves brunch on weekends.

Brasserie Harricana

$$ Fodor's Choice

Instagram famous for its dusty pink chairs and pleasing, contemporary space, this seriously cool brasserie is home to 41 home brews—sold at the boutique upstairs—and a solid menu that may include beer-steamed mussels, portobello burger, and beef tartare. In 2021, a new, larger brewhouse was opened. Waiters are masters at their craft; don’t hesitate to ask for beer pairings with your meal. 

Brasserie L'École

$$$$ | Downtown Fodor's Choice

French country cooking shines at this informal Chinatown bistro, and the historic room—once a schoolhouse for the Chinese community—evokes a timeless brasserie, from the patina-rich fir floors to the chalkboards above the slate bar listing the day's oyster, mussel, and steak options. Owner Sean Brennan, one of the city's better-known chefs, works with local farmers and fishermen to source the best seasonal, local, and organic ingredients. The menu changes daily but lists such contemporary spins on classic bistro fare as duck confit with house-made sausage, beef bourguignon, or spring salmon with beets, shallots, and pommes rissolées. Be prepared for lines as this petite spot does not take reservations—but it's worth the wait.

1715 Government St., Victoria, BC, V8W 1Z4, Canada
250-475–6260
Known For
  • Seasonal menus
  • French-country fare
  • French wine and Belgian beers
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch
Reservations not accepted

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Brick Street Bakery

$ | Distillery District Fodor's Choice

Since 2002, the popular bakery has taken pride in making its products from scratch, using locally sourced, high-quality ingredients and no added preservatives. If the smell of freshly baked bread and buttery croissants doesn’t lure you into this charming spot, the decadent sweets on display—such as cinnamon buns, butter tarts, or scones—certainly will. For heartier appetites, options include pulled pork and vegetarian sandwiches, as well as steak-and-stout pie.

27 Trinity St., Toronto, ON, M5A 3C4, Canada
416-214–4949
Known For
  • No indoor seating and minimal outdoor seating (most people take their fare to go)
  • Handcrafted sandwiches and soups
  • Freshest bread in the neighborhood

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Buca

$$$ | Entertainment District Fodor's Choice

With its refreshing roster of Italian classics, stylish Buca was a pioneer on this stretch of King Street, and its influence continues today. Tucked into an alley just off the main drag, the repurposed boiler room has exposed brick walls, metal columns, and wooden tables that reflect the philosophy behind the menu. Start with a selection of cheeses and cured meats and perhaps an order of nodini, warm bread knots seasoned with rosemary and sea salt.

604 King St. W, Toronto, ON, M5V 1K7, Canada
416-865–1600
Known For
  • Consistently voted one of the best Italian restaurants in Toronto
  • Wines meticulously chosen from Italian vintners
  • Trendy decor
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Buttercream Dreams

$ Fodor's Choice

Heavenly is a word that describes this new bakery, from the aroma that hits you when you enter to the perfectly prepared and freshly baked treats that you'll find it hard to choose between. 

Buvette Scott

$$$ | St-Jean-Baptiste Fodor's Choice

Buvette Scott, nestled on an unpretentious spot in the heart of Saint-Jean-Baptiste, delights with its attractive menu and impeccable service. This Michelin Bib Gourmand recipient has quickly become a local favorite, exuding a warm and inviting atmosphere thanks to its cozy wooden décor. Here, the menu changes almost weekly on a handwritten blackboard, offering a dozen small and medium-sized seasonal dishes, primarily highlighting fresh vegetables and exquisite seafood. Waiters even curate the music, happily taking suggestions to blast that perfect tune on the record player, adding to the friendly, almost family-like ambiance.

821 rue Scott, Québec City, G1R 3C8, Canada
581-741–4464
Known For
  • Affordable plates to share
  • Michelin Bib Gourmand
  • Unfussy, convivial atmosphere
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.–Mon. No lunch

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The Cable Room

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

The seasonal menu is filled with sensational farm-to-table and foraged ingredients making this one of Cape Breton's best dining experiences. Seafood dishes include lobster salad and lobster risotto, and you cannot go wrong with the steak or pork tenderloin that are both cooked to perfection. Be sure to try the crab cakes as an appetizer, and save room for one of their wonderful desserts.

479 NS-205, Baddeck, NS, B0E 1B0, Canada
902-295–1100
Known For
  • 100% gluten-free menu
  • Must-try sticky toffee pudding
  • Seared, smoked scallops
Restaurant Details
Closed Oct.–July
Reservations essential

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Caesar’s Steakhouse and Cocktail bar

$$$$ | Downtown Fodor's Choice

It's safe to say that the beef in Alberta is some of the best around, so if you're looking for the quintessential steak house experience while in town, this Calgary institution (started in 1972) is the place to dine for exceptional Alberta beef. While you're here, try the iconic Ceasar cocktail (like a Bloody Mary but with clamato juice), and perhaps that other iconic Ceasar, the salad which is made table-side.

Café Apotek

$ | Lower Town Fodor's Choice

Tucked away in an unassuming Lower Town corner, Café Apotek reveals itself as a beautifully designed, minimalist sanctuary. Step inside to discover a refined, perfectly welcoming space adorned with a grand wraparound brown marble table, microcement walls, and warm walnut beams. Indulge in delicious Danish pastries, including exquisite cardamom brioches, and savor coffee crafted from beans roasted and imported directly from Denmark. It's a proper Scandinavian experience and an absolute must-visit for discerning coffee aficionados.

Café Bazin

$$ Fodor's Choice

One part pâtisserie, one part café, one part French bistro, this little restaurant has been a darling of food critics since it opened in 2017. Serving deftly executed French dishes like quiche, vol-au-vent, and tartines niçoises in a fresh, modern setting of white subway tiles, decorative brass struts, richly patinated wooden tables, and mint-green velvet seating, Café Bazin is a little corner of France in the heart of Anglo Westmount. You'll likely feel sated after your main course, but don't make the mistake of passing on dessert. Bazin is originally a pâtissier by profession, and the pâtisseries here are exquisite. Try the tartelette choco café, a chocolate flan with Chantilly coffee cream, or the Paris-Brest, a choux pastry with hazelnut praline mousseline.   

Café Boulud

$$$$ | Yorkville Fodor's Choice

Spearheaded by world-renowned restaurateur Daniel Boulud, Café Boulud occupies the coveted dining room of the Four Seasons Hotel Toronto and presents itself as a serene, airy French brasserie decked out with sage-green banquettes and gilded accents. The café does simple, well-executed classic and contemporary French fare, like mouthwatering rotisserie duck, a signature Frenchie burger, and cocktails like the French 55.

Café Brio

$$$$ | Downtown Fodor's Choice

This intimate yet bustling Italian villa–style room has long been a Victoria favorite, mainly because of its Mediterranean-influenced atmosphere and cuisine, which is prepared primarily with locally raised ingredients. The menu changes almost daily, but you might find local halibut paired with an anchovy bacon vinaigrette, or even an apricot dessert soup. Most dishes come in full or half sizes, which are ideal for smaller appetites or for those who want to sample the menu more widely. Virtually everything, including the bread, most pastas, charcuterie, and desserts, is made in-house. The 400-label wine list has a top selection of BC choices.

944 Fort St., Victoria, BC, V8V 3K2, Canada
250-383–0009
Known For
  • House-made charcuterie
  • 400-label wine list
  • Seasonal dishes
Restaurant Details
No lunch. Closed Sun.–Tues. and two weeks in Jan.

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Café Olimpico--Mile-End

$ Fodor's Choice

Ranked one of the world's best cafés by the United Kingdom's Telegraph, this unpretentious 1970s-style café is popular with locals for Italian pastries like cannoli and pistachio bomboloni and, of course, great espresso made from a secret blend of six different coffee beans. It's also a good place to get a feel for authentic Montréal. Families and suits alike head to Café Olimpico in the morning to kick-start their day, and the patio is overflowing with hipsters on sunny days. Baristas here know their craft, and the grinding of the espresso machine is a welcome melody to serious coffee drinkers.

Café Saint-Henri

$ | St-Roch Fodor's Choice

Expect the usual crowd of students, freelancers, and others toting laptops at this third-wave café that has thoughtfully selected beans roasted on-site. Even so, the contemporary, all-white café is a welcome respite from the cold in wintertime—and the doughnuts alone are worth a visit.

849 rue St-Joseph Est, Québec City, G1K 3C8, Canada
581-300–7211
Known For
  • Delicious artisan doughnuts
  • Architectural highlight
  • Beans roasted on the premises
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Café Saint-Henri

$ | St-Roch Fodor's Choice

Expect the usual crowd of students, freelancers, and others toting laptops at this third-wave café that has thoughtfully selected beans roasted on-site. Even so, the contemporary, all-white café is a welcome respite from the cold in wintertime—and the doughnuts alone are worth a visit.

849 rue St-Joseph Est, Québec City, G1K 3C8, Canada
581-300–7211
Known For
  • Delicious artisan doughnuts
  • Architectural highlight
  • Beans roasted on the premises

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Caffè Italia

$ | Little Italy Fodor's Choice

A veritable institution in Little Italy, this modest cafe hasn't changed much since it first opened in 1956; think terrazzo flooring, half-wall plywood panelling, authentic retro barstools, and lots of photos and vintage posters on the walls. The one difference is that now there is a much wider range of coffees available to cater to the more demanding drinking habits of today's consumer. The friendly, welcoming cafe is a family affair, with daughter Luciana and granddaughters Nadia and Laura who manage the Tuscan patriarch's caffè.

Caffettiera

$ Fodor's Choice

Step inside Caffettiera and you just might be convinced you've entered a caffè in Italy circa 1994. Here in this faux-wood-paneled space with its stand-up espresso bar, beige and blue banquettes, and formica tabletops, you'll drink flavorful coffee made from arabica coffee beans roasted in Rome by Fantini and brewed from Vittorio Arduini Lever machines or classic aluminum Bialettis. At the bar, you'll choose from an assortment of panini and Italian dolci, such as brioches, crostate (jam tarts with a lattice pastry top), and bomboloni (ball-shaped doughnuts filled with jam or Nutella). And, since Caffettiera is an authentic Italian bar, not just a café, you'll see bottles of Aperol, Campari, Fernet Branca, and Amaro Nonino behind the bar. There's no detail Italian-Canadian owner Andreas Vecchio and his partner and cousin Diego Lovino haven't thought of. Imported Italian chocolates and bonboni? Check. Italian chips and snacks for aperitivi? Check. Cheap-quality Fantini paper napkins (they also have higher-quality napkins) in Fantini dispensers? Check. Just like in Italy.

Calabash Bistro

$$ Fodor's Choice

Located on the border of Chinatown and Gastown, Calabash Bistro is a laid-back Caribbean eatery known for their flavorful food, rum-forward drinks, and late-night weekend music. Appetizers include guacamole made with plantain chips, fried coconut dumplings, and jerk-marinated wings. Entrees include a variety of curries and rotis (chicken, fish, etc.) alongside slow-braised oxtail and jerk fried chicken.

428 Carrall St., Vancouver, BC, V6B 2J7, Canada
604-568--5882
Known For
  • DJs every Friday and Saturday night
  • Rum flights
  • Some of the best Caribbean food in the city
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.–Wed.

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Canoe

$$$$ | Financial District Fodor's Choice

Huge dining-room windows frame breathtaking views of the Toronto Islands and the lake at this restaurant, on the 54th floor of the Toronto Dominion Bank Tower. Dishes like an appetizer of bison tartare with bannock bread and foie gras and entrées like crispy pork jowl roasted with chaga and an aged tournedos paired with truffled celeriac nod to both tradition and trend.  Book a table at the chef's rail for a close-range perspective on the kitchen's artistry.

66 Wellington St. W, Toronto, ON, M5K 1H6, Canada
416-364–0054
Known For
  • Classic desserts like a maple flan round out an exceptional meal
  • Innovative tasting menus
  • Food inspired by Canada
Restaurant Details
Closed weekends
Reservations essential

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The Canteen

$$$ Fodor's Choice

From hearty upscale sandwiches at lunch to hearty dinners using locally sourced ingredients such as smoked pork chops and pan-seared haddock, this much-loved-by-locals neighborhood restaurant never disappoints. Chef and owner Renée Lavallée is a champion of the local food scene and has appeared as a contestant on Top Chef Canada. 

22 Portland St., Dartmouth, NS, B2Y 1G9, Canada
902-425–9272
Known For
  • Seafood chowder packed with lobster, smoked haddock, mussels, and bacon
  • Two patty Canteen Burger served with hand-cut fries
  • Fun, friendly atmosphere
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.
Reservations essential

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Casa Mia Ristorante

$$$ Fodor's Choice

The best ingredients prepared simply and served in generous portions are what make this off-the-beaten-path restaurant such a find. Modern Amalfi Coast–inspired decor brings a seaside terrace indoors, and it feels miles, not 10 minutes, away from the city's tourist attractions.

3518 Portage Rd., Niagara Falls, ON, L2J 2K4, Canada
905-356–5410
Known For
  • Extremely popular with locals
  • Wine cellar with more than 300 options
  • Relaxed dining experience
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No lunch Sat. and Mon.
Reservations essential

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Catapult Coffee & Studio

$ Fodor's Choice

This large, bright coffee shop in a beautiful historic building is a great place to sit and chill with a perfect cappuccino or latte and enjoy a cinnamon bun. This hugely popular and successful social enterprise supports a local men's shelter. 

116 Princess St., Saint John, NB, E2L 1K4, Canada
506-642–6442
Known For
  • Friendly space with a fireplace
  • Treats fresh baked in-house daily
  • Selection of handmade crafts in-store
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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Chambar

$$$$ | Downtown Fodor's Choice

In this hip, brick-walled eatery, classic Belgian dishes are reinvented with flavors from North Africa and beyond. The moules (mussels) are justifiably popular, either steamed in white wine or sauced with exotic smoked chilis, cilantro, and coconut cream. Those seeking a more adventurous option might select the barbecued frog legs, curried mushrooms, or ostrich carpaccio. Unusual, perhaps, but definitely delicious. Meanwhile, a smartly dressed crowd hangs out at the bar sipping imported beer or delicious cocktails like the Blue Fig (gin infused with oven-roasted figs and served with a side of blue cheese). An easy walk to theaters and sports arenas, it's a good spot for a pre-event bite.

Charlotte Lane Café

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

Chef-owner Roland Glauser whips up creative seafood, meat, and pasta dishes in a restored building that started out as a butcher shop in the mid-1800s. A Swiss influence is evident in many dishes on the extensive menu, including pork tenderloin Zurich-style (braised with mushrooms and demi-glace sauce). The café has a pleasant garden patio and a craft shop. Reservations aren't accepted at lunch but are requested for dinner.

13 Charlotte La., Shelburne, NS, B0T 1W0, Canada
902-875–3314
Known For
  • <PRO>award-winning Taste of Nova Scotia chowder</PRO>
  • <PRO>local ingredients</PRO>
  • <PRO>intimate setting</PRO>
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. and mid-Dec.–early May

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The Cheeky Neighbour Diner

$$ Fodor's Choice

Specializing in superb breakfasts and upscale comfort foods for lunch, this fun and quirky spot is worth lining up for on weekends.