
Banff & the Canadian Rockies
Banff National Park deserves 4 or more days on its own, flown into via Calgary (about 1.5 hours' drive to Banff townsite). The headline sights — Lake Louise, Moraine Lake, and the Icefields Parkway toward the Columbia Icefield — are each worth a dedicated day, and summer traffic/parking at the most famous lakes has gotten genuinely serious enough that a shuttle reservation is now often required. Rent a car for flexibility, but be ready to use the shuttle system in peak summer.
The Canadian Rockies are the kind of scenery that photographs don't quite prepare you for — turquoise glacial lakes, jagged peaks, and wildlife that genuinely wanders into view. Banff is the townsite and the anchor; the park around it is what you actually came for.
How many days do you need?
Four days minimum, a week if you can. One day for Banff townsite and the gondola, one for Lake Louise, one for Moraine Lake and a hike, and at least one full day driving (and stopping constantly) along the Icefields Parkway toward Jasper, with a stop at the Columbia Icefield for a guided glacier walk or the glass-floored Skywalk.
The must-sees
- Lake Louise — the single most photographed lake in Canada for good reason; go at sunrise if you can, both for the light and to beat the crowds and parking crunch.
- Moraine Lake — arguably even more striking than Lake Louise, in the Valley of the Ten Peaks. Private vehicle access is now restricted in peak season — check the current shuttle/reservation system before you go, since this changes park to park and season to season.
- Icefields Parkway — widely considered one of the most scenic drives in the world, connecting Banff to Jasper past glaciers, waterfalls, and near-constant wildlife sightings.
- Columbia Icefield — a guided all-terrain 'Ice Explorer' vehicle drives out onto the glacier itself; the adjacent Skywalk is a glass-floored platform jutting out over the valley.
- Banff Gondola and the hot springs — an easy half-day from the townsite itself, good for a lower-effort day between bigger hikes.
Wildlife safety — take it seriously
Black bears, grizzly bears, elk, and moose are all genuinely present, not a marketing exercise. Carry bear spray on hikes and know how to use it, never approach wildlife for a photo (a surprising number of injuries happen this way every year), store food properly at campsites, and check current trail closures — parks close specific trails when bear activity is high.
Getting there and park fees
| Detail | What to know |
|---|---|
| Nearest airport | Calgary (YYC), about 1.5 hours' drive to Banff townsite |
| Park pass | A Parks Canada day pass or annual Discovery Pass is required for every vehicle entering the park — buy online in advance to skip the gate line |
| Best season | Summer (June–September) for hiking and full access; winter (December–March) for skiing at Lake Louise, Sunshine Village, or Banff Sunshine, with a very different, quieter atmosphere |
| Shoulder seasons | May and October are quieter and cheaper, but some high-elevation trails and facilities may still be snow-affected |












































