Quebec
Mont Royal
How to walk up Mont Royal in Montreal: the free Kondiaronk belvedere skyline view, which path up to take, and the golden-hour timing that beats a midday climb.
Where
Montreal, Canada
Opening hours
Open access (always open) โ the park and the main belvedere are public and free; the chalet building and any cafรฉ keep shorter daytime hours. Confirm current hours on the official Mont Royal park site.
Tickets
Free โ no ticket needed; the park, the trails and the Kondiaronk belvedere lookout all cost nothing.
Time needed
Allow 1.5โ2 hours for the walk up, the view and back; 45 minutes to an hour if you ride most of the way up and just take in the lookout.
In short
Visiting Mont Royal
Mont Royal is the hill Montreal is named after, a wooded park rising over the downtown grid. The reward is the Kondiaronk belvedere beside the chalet, where the classic view sweeps over the skyline and out to the St Lawrence River. It's free and open access, and far better at golden hour than under flat midday sun. Walk up through the park's paths or take the bus near the top if you'd rather save your legs.
Getting up to the belvedere
Mont Royal is the wooded hill that gives Montreal its name, a big landscaped park rising straight out of the downtown grid. The thing everyone comes for is the Kondiaronk belvedere, the broad stone terrace beside the chalet, where the classic postcard view opens up: the downtown towers, the river plain and a long bend of the St Lawrence beyond. Itโs free, itโs open access, and itโs the single best view of the city you can get without paying for a tower lift.
Youโve a choice of how to reach it. The pleasant way is on foot, climbing the shaded park paths or the long, gently graded Olmsted carriage trail โ roughly 30 to 45 minutes up from the downtown edge, more if you wander. If youโd rather not climb, a city bus runs near the summit and thereโs parking close to the chalet, so the belvedere is reachable even if you skip the hike. Either way the lookout itself is a short, flat walk from the chalet door.
When to go, and keeping it honest
Time it for golden hour โ late afternoon into early evening. Under flat midday sun the downtown glass goes grey and river haze can dull the whole scene, but the low evening light models the towers and warms the stone of the terrace. Sunset is the moment most regulars turn up for, and itโs worth lingering as the city lights come on.
A couple of honest caveats. The summit is a genuine hill, so the walk up has some puff to it; in winter the paths can be icy and the chalet and cafรฉ keep shorter hours. And the belvedere does get busy at sunset on a fine evening, though thereโs room to spread out. Verdict: itโs free, itโs central, and it gives you Montrealโs defining view โ just go for the light rather than ticking it off at noon, and treat the walk through the park as part of the pleasure rather than a chore.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Montreal city guide.