Discover Atlantic Canada: Wild Coasts, Warm Hearts & World-Class Adventures

EXPLORE ATLANTIC CANADA

Canada's East Coast provinces — New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, PEI & Newfoundland

Canada's four Atlantic provinces — New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, and Newfoundland & Labrador — form one of the world's most captivating travel regions. Here, towering icebergs drift past colorful fishing villages, whales surface alongside ferry routes, and centuries of Celtic, Acadian, and Indigenous heritage weave through every meal, melody, and conversation. Stretching from the world's highest tides to North America's most easterly point, Atlantic Canada rewards the curious traveler with landscapes and experiences that simply don't exist anywhere else on earth.

New Brunswick
Canada's Bilingual Heartland
New Brunswick is the only officially bilingual province in Canada, where French Acadian culture thrives alongside English heritage in a landscape shaped by the sea. The province is defined by the Bay of Fundy — home to the world's highest tides, which rise and fall up to 16 metres twice a day, sculpting the iconic flowerpot sea stacks at Hopewell Rocks and powering one of the planet's great natural spectacles. Beyond the tides, you'll find cosmopolitan Fredericton on the banks of the Saint John River, the whale-watching haven of St. Andrews-by-the-Sea, and the vibrant Acadian coast with its warm salt water, spirited festivals, and a joie de vivre unlike anything else in Canada.

Nova Scotia
The Ocean Playground
Named "New Scotland" by its early settlers, Nova Scotia is almost entirely surrounded by water and shaped in every way by the sea. The province boasts over 7,600 km of coastline, more than 150 lighthouses, and a deeply proud maritime identity. Drive the legendary Cabot Trail — 298 km of cliff-edge road winding through Cape Breton Highlands National Park with views over whale-inhabited waters — or stand beside Canada's most photographed lighthouse at Peggy's Cove. History lovers can step back to 1744 at the Fortress of Louisbourg, and food and wine enthusiasts will find a thriving scene with over 20 award-winning wineries producing Nova Scotia's signature Tidal Bay wine. Named one of Travel + Leisure's top destinations in 2025, the province continues to captivate visitors worldwide.

Prince Edward Island
The Garden of the Gulf
Canada's smallest province punches well above its weight in charm, culinary excellence, and natural beauty. PEI's signature landscape — red sandstone cliffs dropping to white-sand beaches, emerald farmland, and peaceful harbors — is the reason the island earned its nickname: the Garden of the Gulf. Charlottetown, the birthplace of Canadian Confederation, offers boutique dining, vibrant theater, and a walkable historic core, while the island's North Shore rewards visitors with pristine national park beaches and the farmstead that inspired Lucy Maud Montgomery's beloved Anne of Green Gables novels. And then there's the food: PEI is the lobster, oyster, and potato capital of Canada, and the island's chefs have built a globally recognized culinary identity around what comes from its red soil and cold, clean waters.

Newfoundland & Labrador
The Rock — Canada's Wild East
Newfoundland and Labrador is the Canada that time forgot and adventure found. With 29,000 km of rugged Atlantic coastline, the province offers some of the most dramatic and untouched landscapes in North America. Every spring, thousands of icebergs — some the size of office buildings — calve from Greenland's glaciers and drift south along "Iceberg Alley" past the province's coast. Gros Morne National Park, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, lets you hike across exposed sections of the Earth's actual mantle at the Tablelands and glide through glacier-carved fjords on Western Brook Pond. History stretches back even further at L'Anse aux Meadows, the world's only confirmed Norse settlement in North America — and to the colorful jellybean row houses and lively pub culture of St. John's, North America's oldest English-founded city.

Canada's East Coast provinces — New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, PEI & Newfoundland

Featured Experiences

Discover Atlantic & Eastern Canada—scenic East Coast road trips, Maritime province tours, coastal vacations, and unforgettable whale watching in St Andrews. Plan your Canada East Coast adventure today!

  • check iconNew Brunswick
    Walk the ocean floor at Hopewell Rocks
    Twice a day, the Bay of Fundy's incomparable tides drain up to 160 billion tonnes of seawater from the bay, exposing the ocean floor around the famous flowerpot rock formations at Hopewell Cape. Walk among these 15-metre sea stacks at low tide, then watch them disappear beneath the waves just hours later — or kayak right over them at high tide. It's one of the most surreal natural experiences in Canada.
  • check iconHopewell Rocks in Hopewell Cape, NB.
  • check iconShediac Bay Cruises in Shediac, NB.
  • check iconReversing Rapids in Saint John.
  • check iconKings Landing Historical Settlement, 20 mins from Fredericton.
  • check iconWhale Watching in St Andrews-by-the-Sea, NB.
  • check iconFundy National Park in Alma, NB.
  • check iconFundy Trail Parkway in St Martin's, NB.
  • check iconNew Brunswick Museum in Saint John, NB.
  • check iconLe Pays de la Sagouine in Bouctouche, NB.
  • check icon Walk on the earth's mantle in Tablelands.
  • check iconVisit Peggy's Cove, Canada's most photographed lighthouse.
  • check iconStroll the Halifax Harbour's accessible and busy waterfront boardwalk.
  • check iconTalk a walking tour of Lunenburg's “Old Town”, a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
  • check iconHike the Skyline Trail, in Cape Breton Highlands National Park.
  • check iconStep back into 1744 New France at the Fortress of Louisbourg National Historic Site.
  • check iconDo a wine-tasting at one of 18 different Nova Scotia award-winning wineries.
  • check iconHop on board to see 10,000-year-old Icebergs in Newfoundland.
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How to plan a trip to Atlantic Canada

Atlantic Canada rewards those who take their time. The four provinces are best explored over 10 to 21 days — either as a Maritime loop through New Brunswick, PEI, and Nova Scotia, or as a deeper dive that adds Newfoundland and Labrador. Here's everything you need to know before you go.

How to plan a trip to Atlantic Canada

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