The Bell Centre in downtown Montreal is the largest arena in the NHL by capacity, seating over 21,000 passionate fans for Montreal Canadiens games in a city where hockey is a civic religion. The Canadiens have won 24 Stanley Cup championships — more than any other NHL franchise. Hotels in Montreal offer outstanding arena access and the city's extraordinary French-Canadian culture, world-class poutine and smoked meat, vibrant nightlife, and the festival scene of one of North America's most European cities.
Presiding over Sherbrooke Street West since 1912, the Ritz-Carlton Montreal is a living institution — a grand hotel of considerable beauty where afternoon tea in the Garden restaurant and suites overlooking the duck pond remain timeless Montreal pleasures.
Occupying two heritage buildings in the heart of Vieux-Montréal, Hotel William Gray is the neighbourhood's most design-forward luxury address. The rooftop terrace above the cobblestones offers one of the city's finest views over the Old Port.
Named for the romantic Québécois poet, Hotel Nelligan inhabits two 19th-century merchant buildings in Vieux-Montréal with exposed stone walls and warm brick that make every corner deeply atmospheric. The Verses rooftop bar is unforgettable in summer.
A Montreal legend since 1958 — where John and Yoko recorded Give Peace a Chance in Suite 1742 — the Fairmont Queen Elizabeth emerged from a transformative redesign as a true 21st-century grand hotel, with Rosélys restaurant and a breathtaking new lobby.
Le Germain is the flagship of Québec's most acclaimed homegrown hotel group — a chic downtown bolthole where oversized bathrooms, impeccable service, and the excellent Laurie Raphaël restaurant earn it fierce loyalty among savvy Montreal visitors.
Occupying the heritage building of the celebrated Birks jeweller on Phillips Square, Hotel Birks Montreal is a jewel of adaptive reuse — original terrazzo floors, soaring ceilings, and a destination lobby bar that has become one of downtown's liveliest gathering places.