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Grouse Mountain, Canada
Grouse Mountain

British Columbia

Grouse Mountain

How to visit Grouse Mountain from downtown Vancouver: which ticket the Skyride needs, whether to hike the Grouse Grind instead, and an honest worth-it verdict in pounds.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 10 Jun 2026

Where

Vancouver, Canada

Opening hours

Skyride runs daily year-round, departing roughly every 15 minutes from about 09:00 to 22:00 (last down-bound car about 22:00). Summer chalet attractions (Lumberjack Show, bird-of-prey demos) run roughly mid-June to early September; in winter the mountain switches to a ski-and-snowboard hill. Always confirm your date on grousemountain.com.

Tickets

All-access Mountain Admission is about CA$75 (~ยฃ44) adult return and CA$45 (~ยฃ26) child in summer, including the Skyride both ways. Hiking the Grouse Grind is free, but the Skyride download back to the base is about CA$20 (~ยฃ12). Winter lift tickets are priced separately.

Time needed

Half a day: about 2.5-3 hours on the mountain plus the Skyride and the trip out from downtown. Add 1.5-2 hours if you hike the Grouse Grind up.

In short

Visiting Grouse Mountain

The headline ticket is the all-access Mountain Admission, which covers the Skyride aerial tram up and down plus the summer chalet attractions โ€” the Lumberjack Show, the grizzly bear refuge and the Eye of the Wind turntable. Buy it online before you go, because the on-the-day desk queue at the base in North Vancouver runs 20-40 minutes on a clear summer afternoon when the city empties up the mountain. The fit alternative is the Grouse Grind, a free 2.5km trail that gains roughly 850m on a relentless staircase โ€” locals call it Mother Nature's StairMaster โ€” but note it is uphill-only and you still pay about CA$20 for the Skyride back down. Go on a clear day and check the mountain webcam first: the whole point is the city-and-Pacific view, and low cloud erases it.

Which ticket, and getting there

The thing to book is the all-access Mountain Admission โ€” about CA$75 (~ยฃ44) adult โ€” which covers the Skyride aerial tram up and down plus the summer chalet attractions. Buy it online: the base-station desk in North Vancouver backs up 20-40 minutes on a clear summer afternoon, exactly when half the city has had the same idea. Without a car, the public route is the SeaBus from Waterfront to Lonsdale Quay (about 12 minutes across the harbour), then the 236 bus to the base on Nancy Greene Way โ€” roughly 45-60 minutes door to door on one TransLink fare. Capilano Suspension Bridge sits on the same road, so the efficient move is to pair the two, and most bundled tours do exactly that.

Skyride or the Grouse Grind?

If you are fit and want to earn the view, the Grouse Grind is the free alternative: a 2.5km trail that gains about 850m on a brutal staircase the locals call Mother Natureโ€™s StairMaster. Be honest with yourself, though โ€” it is 45-90 minutes of solid climbing with no view until the top, it is uphill-only and closed in winter, and you still pay about CA$20 (~ยฃ12) for the Skyride back down, because walking down is not allowed. For most first-timers the tram up and down is the easier and saner call.

Worth it? Let the forecast decide

This is a clear-day attraction. The whole point is the view over the city, the harbour and the Pacific from the top, so check the mountain webcam before you set off โ€” if low cloud is sitting on the North Shore you will pay CA$75 for a foggy chalet. In summer the Lumberjack Show and the grizzly bear refuge make it a solid family half-day; in winter it flips to a ski-and-snowboard hill with lift tickets priced separately.

On a fine day it is a worthwhile half-day, best paired with Capilano Suspension Bridge next door. But it is entirely weather-led โ€” if the forecast is grey, spend the day on the Stanley Park seawall or Granville Island instead and save the mountain for a clear morning.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Vancouver city guide.

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Grouse Mountain FAQs

How do you get to Grouse Mountain from downtown Vancouver?
Without a car, take the SeaBus from Waterfront across the harbour to Lonsdale Quay (about 12 minutes), then the 236 bus to the Grouse Mountain base on Nancy Greene Way โ€” roughly 45-60 minutes door to door on a single TransLink fare of about CA$3.20-4.65. A taxi or ride-hail from downtown is around CA$35-45 and 25-35 minutes. Many visitors do it as a bundled tour with Capilano Suspension Bridge, which sits between the two.
Should you hike the Grouse Grind or take the Skyride?
Take the Skyride up unless you are fit and specifically want the climb. The Grouse Grind is a 2.5km trail gaining about 850m โ€” steep, busy and roughly 45-90 minutes of solid stair-climbing with no view until the top. It is uphill-only and closed in winter, and you still pay about CA$20 for the Skyride back down, since walking down is not allowed. For most first-timers the tram up and down is the easier call.
Is Grouse Mountain worth it?
On a clear day, yes โ€” the Skyride view over the city, the harbour and the Pacific is the draw, and the summer Lumberjack Show and grizzly refuge make it a solid family half-day. But it is weather-dependent: if low cloud is sitting on the North Shore the view disappears and you have paid CA$75 for a foggy chalet, so check the mountain webcam before you commit. Capilano Suspension Bridge nearby is the common pairing on a fine day.

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