Every Canadian has a province. And somewhere underneath the national politeness, every Canadian thinks their province is the better one. Not dramatically better, not in a way they would push at a dinner party, but better in the quiet way that home always seems better than everywhere else when you have been away long enough. Here is the strongest case for each of the ten. Some of these arguments are easier to make than others. All of them are genuine.
Ontario
Ontario has the largest economy, the largest population, the most universities, and the most political power in Confederation. This is not a coincidence. Ontario built the country’s industrial base, absorbs more immigration than any other province, and contains both the financial capital and the literal capital of Canada within its borders. The cottage country in Muskoka is genuinely spectacular. Toronto’s food scene competes with any city on the continent. The traffic in the 416 is a disaster that Ontario has somehow decided is acceptable, which is the province’s primary character flaw. Everything else mostly works.
Quebec
Montreal has world-class restaurants, rents that make Toronto residents physically ill with envy, and a cultural ecosystem that exists nowhere else in North America. Quebec produces extraordinary musicians, filmmakers, and writers. Quebecers have a relationship with pleasure, with food and leisure and the arts, that the rest of Canada has spent generations trying to imitate and cannot quite get right because the thing being imitated is not a lifestyle choice but a culture. The language question is real. The culture it has produced is irreplaceable.
British Columbia
Stand at the water in Vancouver and look north at the mountains. Drive the Sea-to-Sky to Whistler. Walk through old-growth forest on Vancouver Island. There is no comparable landscape in Canada and possibly no comparable landscape anywhere that is also attached to a functioning major city with a real economy. The weather in the Lower Mainland is, by Canadian standards, almost suspiciously mild. People move to BC and do not leave, and the reason is always the scenery, stated directly or disguised as other reasons. The scenery is the reason.
Alberta
Alberta has no provincial sales tax. Alberta has Banff and Jasper, two of the most spectacular national parks on the continent, within driving distance of a major city. Alberta has a political culture that takes self-reliance seriously in ways that produce real results alongside real frustrations. Calgary has transformed from a cow town into one of the most livable cities in the country over the past thirty years. The summers, when the Rockies are visible from the highway and the sky goes on until it becomes something else, are genuinely extraordinary.
Manitoba
Manitoba does not pretend. It does not have the mountains or the ocean or the urban scale of the bigger provinces, and it does not try to convince you otherwise. Winnipeg is a genuinely strange and interesting city that its own reputation consistently undersells. The Museum for Human Rights is one of the finest museums in Canada. The Winnipeg Folk Festival is one of the best music events in the country. The Indigenous cultural heritage of the province is remarkable. Manitoba knows what it is, which is rarer than it sounds.
Saskatchewan
Saskatchewan produces roughly forty percent of Canada’s wheat. The prairie landscape, which people who have not spent time in it describe as flat and boring and which people from Saskatchewan describe as open and full of sky, has a beauty that takes adjustment to perceive and then becomes difficult to unsee. The Northern Lights in Saskatchewan are among the most vivid in Canada. Regina and Saskatoon are quietly functional, affordable cities that have been developing real cultural infrastructure for a generation. The province punches above its weight in terms of what it has contributed to Canada, which is something Saskatchewan people know and do not always get credit for.
Nova Scotia
The Cabot Trail on Cape Breton Island is one of the most beautiful coastal drives in the world. Full stop. Halifax is a university city with a genuine waterfront culture, good live music, and a scale that allows you to actually know it rather than just move through it. The province has a depth of historical layering, Mi’kmaq, French Acadian, Black Loyalist, Scottish Highland, that rewards investigation. The tides in the Bay of Fundy are the highest in the world. The lobster is the best in Canada. This last claim is contested by New Brunswick. Nova Scotia is not interested in the counterargument.
New Brunswick
New Brunswick is the only officially bilingual province in Canada. Roughly a third of its population speaks French as a first language, primarily Acadian French, and the cultural mixture that produces, the festivals and the food and the music and the particular accent that sounds like nowhere else, is genuinely unusual. Moncton has grown into a real city with real energy without losing the scale that makes it manageable. The Fundy coastline is dramatic in ways that photos do not fully capture. The province is underrated almost everywhere, which at least means it has not been ruined yet.
Prince Edward Island
PEI used its smallness wisely, which is not the obvious move. The red soil coastline is one of the most distinctive landscapes in Canada. The oysters are exceptional. The province has a strong agricultural identity and a genuine sense of community that larger places work very hard to manufacture and cannot quite get right. People who visit PEI expecting a theme park find instead a place that feels, unusually, like it has not been completely reorganized around the interests of people passing through. That quality is rarer than it used to be and worth more than most places charge for it.
Newfoundland and Labrador
This one comes up in almost every conversation about the provinces. Newfoundlanders are, by near-universal consensus among people who have spent real time there, the warmest people in Canada. The accent is a treasure. The music is something you have to hear in a bar in St. John’s on a Thursday night to properly understand. Gros Morne National Park in the west is startling in its geological strangeness. The province joined Canada last and has stayed most distinctly itself. People who grow up there and move away carry it with them in a way that is visible and specific. You can tell. They cannot stop talking about it. They are not wrong to.
Manitoba: The Province That Knows What It Is
Manitoba doesn’t pretend. It doesn’t have the mountains or the ocean or the urban density of the bigger provinces. What it has is a genuine, unpretentious quality of life, a remarkable Indigenous cultural heritage, and Winnipeg — a city that is weirder, more interesting, and more culturally alive than its reputation suggests. The Winnipeg Folk Festival is one of the best music events in the country. The Museum for Human Rights is one of the finest museums in Canada. Manitoba knows it’s not trying to be anyone else, which gives it a confidence that some larger provinces lack.
Saskatchewan: The Province That Feeds the World
Saskatchewan produces roughly 40% of Canada’s wheat and is one of the most agriculturally productive places on earth. The prairie landscape — which outsiders call flat and boring and which people from Saskatchewan describe as open and full of sky — has a particular beauty that takes time to see but, once seen, is difficult to unsee. The Northern Lights in Saskatchewan are among the most vivid in the country. Regina and Saskatoon are quietly functional, affordable, and increasingly cultured cities. The province has produced more than its share of Canadian politicians, writers, and innovators for its population size.
Nova Scotia: The Province With the Best Coastline
Nova Scotia is almost entirely surrounded by water, and it shows. The Cabot Trail on Cape Breton Island is one of the most beautiful coastal drives in the world. The lobster is the best in Canada (and we acknowledge this claim is contested). Halifax is a university city with a genuine waterfront culture, excellent live music, and a scale that allows you to actually know it. The province has a depth of history — Mi’kmaq, French Acadian, Black Loyalist, Scots Highland — that rewards investigation. And the tides in the Bay of Fundy are the highest in the world, which is not something everyone can claim.
New Brunswick: The Province That’s Both Things at Once
New Brunswick is the only officially bilingual province in Canada. Roughly a third of its population is Francophone, primarily Acadian, and the cultural mixing that produces — the festivals, the food, the music, the particular New Brunswick accent that sounds like nowhere else — is something genuinely unusual in North America. Moncton has grown into a real city without losing the scale that makes living there manageable. The Fundy coastline is dramatic. The province is underrated almost everywhere, which means it still has the quality of not being crowded.
Prince Edward Island: The Province That Got the Balance Right
PEI is the smallest province, and it has used its smallness wisely. The red soil coastline is iconic. The seafood — particularly the oysters and the mussels and yes, the lobster — is exceptional. The province has a strong agricultural identity, a genuine sense of community, and a scale that allows for a quality of life that larger places can’t replicate. Anne of Green Gables tourism is only a fraction of what the island actually is. People who visit PEI expecting a theme park find instead a place that feels, unusually, like it hasn’t been completely ruined by the 21st century.
Newfoundland and Labrador: The Province With the Best People
This one, more than any other, comes up in nearly every conversation about the provinces. Newfoundlanders are, by near-universal consensus among people who have spent time there, the most genuinely warm, funny, and hospitable people in Canada. The accent is a UNESCO-level treasure. The culture — the music, the storytelling, the particular Newfoundland sense of humour that finds comedy in hardship — is unlike anything else in the country. The landscape of Newfoundland, particularly the Gros Morne National Park in the west, is startling in its beauty. The province joined Canada last and has retained its distinct identity most successfully. You go there once and you understand immediately why the people who grow up there never quite get over it.
Leave a comment