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Nova Scotia, Canada
Nova Scotia

Atlantic Canada

Nova Scotia

An Atlantic Canada road trip with the wheel on the right: Halifax, the Cabot Trail and Peggy's Cove, real drive times, and why you should give it a full week, not a weekend.

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

In short

Nova Scotia at a glance

Nova Scotia is Atlantic Canada's classic self-drive: you fly into Halifax, pick up a hire car at the airport and loop a coastline of fishing villages, lighthouses and the Cabot Trail mountain road on Cape Breton Island. It is not a place to rush โ€” distances look small on a map but the scenic roads are slow, and the headline drive, the 298km Cabot Trail, deserves two days, not an afternoon. There are no nonstop flights from the UK, so you connect through Toronto, Montreal or Newark; allow a full week, and come in September or early October for the lobster, the quiet and the fall colour.

Nova Scotia is the Atlantic Canada road trip people mean when they talk about lobster rolls, painted fishing villages and lighthouses on the rocks โ€” a province small enough to loop in a week but slow enough that you shouldnโ€™t try to do it in less. The shape of a first trip is almost always the same: fly into Halifax, pick up a car, run the South Shore lighthouses down to Lunenburg, cross the Bay of Fundy with its 16-metre tides, and save three days for Cape Breton and the Cabot Trail, the 298km mountain-and-sea road that is the real reason to come.

The mistake first-timers make is reading the map in kilometres. Distances look tiny, but these are two-lane coastal roads that twist past every cove, and the Cabot Trail in particular rewards two unhurried days over one frantic one. The other trap is over-scoping: people see Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick on the map and assume they can bolt them on, but each is a separate trip, and Nova Scotia alone comfortably fills the week. Come in late September for the lobster and the fall colour, drive on the right, and let the days breathe.

The route

A relaxed one-week loop from Halifax that takes in the South Shore lighthouses, the Bay of Fundy and the Cabot Trail without backtracking on yourself. Drive times are real road estimates on Nova Scotia's two-lane highways, which are slower than the kilometres suggest โ€” build in stops.

  1. Days 1โ€“2

    Halifax & the South Shore

    Pick up the hire car at Halifax Stanfield airport (about 35 minutes from downtown). Give the city a day โ€” the waterfront boardwalk, the Maritime Museum and its Titanic gallery, the Citadel โ€” then run the South Shore: Peggy's Cove lighthouse is ~45 minutes out, and Lunenburg, a UNESCO old town, is ~1h20. Go to Peggy's Cove early to beat the cruise coaches.

  2. Day 3

    Annapolis Valley & the Bay of Fundy

    Cut across to the Bay of Fundy, which has the highest tides on earth โ€” up to 16 metres. Wolfville and Grand Prรฉ (a UNESCO Acadian site) are ~1h from Halifax through wine country; time a tidal-bore or mudflat walk to the tide tables. It's about a 4h drive on from here to Cape Breton, so this is a long road day.

  3. Days 4โ€“6

    Cape Breton & the Cabot Trail

    The heart of the trip. Base in Baddeck or Ingonish and drive the 298km Cabot Trail over two days, not one โ€” the Skyline Trail boardwalk, the Highlands National Park lookoffs and the Acadian fishing villages of Chรฉticamp all need time. A Parks Canada day pass is ~CA$11 (about ยฃ6). Whale-watching boats run from Pleasant Bay in summer.

  4. Day 7

    Back to Halifax

    It's roughly a 4h30 drive straight back to Halifax from Cape Breton, so either do it in one go on your last full day or break it at Antigonish. Drop the car at the airport with a full tank โ€” fuel near Stanfield is pricier โ€” and fly home via your connecting hub.

Where to base yourself

Pick one or two bases rather than moving every night.

Halifax (Downtown / Waterfront)

ยฃยฃยฃ premium

The obvious first and last base: walkable to the boardwalk, the Citadel and the best restaurants, and 35 minutes from the airport. Book a hotel with parking or a nearby lot, as downtown street parking is tight. The most expensive beds in the province, but where the flights land.

Best for: Arrival, nightlife, first and last nights

Browse hotels Loop start & end

Lunenburg / South Shore

ยฃยฃ mid-range

A UNESCO-listed harbour town of painted clapboard houses, ~1h20 from Halifax โ€” the prettiest South Shore base and an easy reach for Peggy's Cove and Mahone Bay. Inns and B&Bs rather than big hotels; book ahead for summer weekends.

Best for: Lighthouses, seafood, a slower pace

Browse hotels ~1h20 from Halifax

Baddeck or Ingonish (Cape Breton)

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The two practical bases for driving the Cabot Trail. Baddeck sits on the Bras d'Or Lake at the trail's start; Ingonish is up on the eastern coast inside the national park, handy for the Highlands and the Keltic Lodge. Either splits the loop into two manageable days.

Best for: Driving the Cabot Trail, hiking, whale watching

Browse hotels ~4h from Halifax

Getting around Nova Scotia

Nova Scotia is a hire-car trip and little else โ€” outside Halifax there is essentially no public transport, and the sights are strung along slow two-lane coastal roads. Pick the car up at Halifax Stanfield airport (~ยฃ45โ€“65/day) and keep it the whole trip; Canada drives on the right, roads are quiet and easy, but the scenic routes are slower than the kilometres suggest, so don't pack the days too tight. The Cabot Trail is best driven anticlockwise (so you're on the seaward side at the lookoffs). Fuel up before the remote stretches of Cape Breton, and watch for moose at dawn and dusk in the Highlands. Halifax itself is walkable, with a ferry across the harbour to Dartmouth, so you barely touch the car in the city.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

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Tours & tickets

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Airport transfers

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Car hire

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Stay connected

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Nova Scotia FAQs

How many days do you need in Nova Scotia?
A full week is the sweet spot: two days for Halifax and the South Shore, one to cross via the Bay of Fundy, three for Cape Breton and the Cabot Trail, and a day to drive back. Five days works if you skip the Bay of Fundy and go straight from Halifax to Cape Breton, but don't try to add Prince Edward Island or New Brunswick on top โ€” they each need their own trip.
Do you need a car in Nova Scotia?
Yes. Outside Halifax there's almost no public transport, and the lighthouses, the Bay of Fundy and the Cabot Trail are only reachable by road. Hire a car at Halifax airport (~ยฃ45โ€“65/day) and keep it the whole week. Canada drives on the right, the roads are quiet and easy, but the scenic two-lane highways are slow, so allow more time than the distances suggest.
When is the best time to visit Nova Scotia?
Late September and early October: warm-enough days, peak lobster season, fall colour blazing across Cape Breton and far fewer cruise-ship crowds at Peggy's Cove than in July and August. Many Cabot Trail businesses and the whale-watching boats close from late October, and winter (Decemberโ€“March) brings hazardous driving, so the May-to-mid-October window is the one to aim for.

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