Skip to content
Departly.
Vancouver, Canada
Vancouver

British Columbia

Vancouver

Give it three or four nights downtown or in Yaletown by the seawall, ride the Canada Line in from YVR, and lock in the Sea-to-Sky day or a Vancouver Island ferry before the dates fill up.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 9 Jun 2026

Best length

3-4 nights

Airport

Vancouver International (YVR), ~12km south on Sea Island

Airport to centre

Canada Line SkyTrain ~25 min to Waterfront/downtown

Best base

Downtown West End for first-timers; Yaletown for dining

In short

Vancouver at a glance

Vancouver is best as a 3- or 4-night base at the start or end of a West Coast trip: stay downtown or in Yaletown within walking distance of Stanley Park, take the Canada Line in from YVR rather than a taxi, build the city days around the seawall and Granville Island, and book the Sea-to-Sky day to Whistler or a Vancouver Island ferry leg before you commit your dates.

The short version

  • Stay downtown near the West End for the easiest first trip; you can walk the Stanley Park seawall straight from your hotel.
  • Take the Canada Line SkyTrain from YVR โ€” it is ~25 minutes and about CA$9 to downtown, against CA$35-plus for a taxi.
  • Build in the rain: October to March is genuinely wet, so plan indoor anchors (Granville Island, the Aquarium, Museum of Anthropology) alongside the outdoor days.
  • Whistler is a 1h45 drive up the Sea-to-Sky Highway, not next door โ€” make it a full day or an overnight, not an afternoon.
  • Three full days covers Stanley Park, Granville Island, Gastown and one mountain or Capilano half-day; add nights if you are continuing to Vancouver Island.

Vancouver works best not as a destination in its own right but as the polished bookend to a wider British Columbia trip โ€” a few easy days walking the Stanley Park seawall, eating across Yaletown and Granville Island, and getting your body clock back before you push on to Whistler, the islands or the Rockies. The mistake first-timers make is treating the mountains and Whistler as if they were suburbs: the Sea-to-Sky drive is the better part of two hours, the Vancouver Island ferry eats most of a day, and trying to bolt either onto an afternoon turns a calm city into a stressful one.

The other thing the brochures quietly skip is the rain. From October to March the city sits under low grey cloud for weeks, so a trip planned entirely around outdoor views can fall flat โ€” the fix is to anchor each day with something indoors (the market, the Aquarium, the Museum of Anthropology) so a wet morning doesnโ€™t write itself off. Three full days is the comfortable minimum; below, the structured planning โ€” where to stay, what to book, how to get in from YVR, and a realistic budget in pounds โ€” picks up from here.

Plan your Vancouver trip

Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.

Top things to do in Vancouver

Capilano Suspension Bridge Park

Capilano is North Vancouver's best-known paid attraction โ€” a 140-metre, 70-metre-high swaying bridge across the canyon, plus the Treetops Adventure walkways and the Cliffwalk. Buy your ticket online before you go, then catch the park's free shuttle from downtown rather than driving or taxiing across the bridge. Go early (it opens at 09:00) or in the last couple of hours: the cruise-ship coaches flood the bridge between roughly 11:00 and 15:00, and the canyon is half the size of the queue at peak. If the CA$66.95 adult ticket makes you wince, the free Lynn Canyon suspension bridge 15 minutes away is the local workaround.

2โ€“3 hours $66.95

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.

Half a day $75

Where to stay first

The areas that make a first visit easier โ€” not an exhaustive directory.

Downtown West End

ยฃยฃยฃ premium

The easiest first-timer base: you can walk straight onto the Stanley Park seawall, English Bay beach is at the door, and it is calmer at night than the Granville Street bar strip. Not the cheapest, but it saves a commute every day.

Best for: First-timers, couples, walkers

Browse hotels Central, walkable to Stanley Park

Yaletown

ยฃยฃยฃ premium

Converted warehouse district with the city's best concentration of restaurants and a SkyTrain stop. On the seawall and the Aquabus to Granville Island, slightly slicker and pricier than the West End.

Best for: Dining, nightlife, repeat visitors

Browse hotels 10 min walk from downtown core

Gastown

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The cobbled old quarter with the steam clock, indie shops and bars. Atmospheric and central, but it backs onto the Downtown Eastside, so check exactly which block your hotel is on before booking.

Best for: Old-city atmosphere, bars, short stays

Browse hotels Edge of downtown

Kitsilano

ยฃยฃ mid-range

Beachy residential neighbourhood across False Creek with Kits Beach, the saltwater pool and laid-back cafes. Better value and more local, at the cost of a bus ride or drive to the downtown sights.

Best for: Beach feel, value, families

Browse hotels 15-20 min by bus from downtown

Airport to city centre

Vancouver airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
Canada Line SkyTrain to Waterfront ~25 min about CA$9.05 with the YVR AddFare (less off-peak) Simplest and fastest; tap a contactless card
Taxi to downtown ~25-40 min depending on traffic usually CA$35-45 Flat-ish zone fares; good for late arrivals or lots of luggage
Ride-hail (Uber/Lyft) ~25-40 min typically CA$30-50 Pickup from the designated airport zone
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: July to September is the reliable window: long dry days, the seawall and mountains at their best, and ferries to Vancouver Island running full schedules. May, June and early October are quieter and cheaper with a real chance of fine spells, while October to March is genuinely wet and grey at sea level even when the mountains are skiing.

Summer is warm, dry and busy with peak hotel prices; book ahead for July-August. Autumn turns wet from mid-October. Winter is mild but rainy in the city and snowy on the North Shore mountains (Grouse, Cypress) and at Whistler, so it is a ski base rather than a city-break season. Spring is variable but good value, with cherry blossom across the West End in late March and April.

What it costs

UK return flights to Vancouver are typically ยฃ500-ยฃ800 from London, dipping lower on shoulder-season dates (May, September-October) and topping ยฃ800+ in the July-August peak. Nonstops run ~9h35 from Heathrow; off-peak you may connect via Toronto or a US hub.

Daily budget per person

Sample trip: A realistic 4-night mid-range Vancouver stay for one person is roughly ยฃ900-ยฃ1,300 before flights: ยฃ480-ยฃ700 hotel share, ยฃ180-ยฃ260 food and drink (remember sales tax and 15-20% tips on top), ยฃ40-ยฃ60 local transport and ferries, and ยฃ150-ยฃ280 for Capilano or Grouse plus a Whistler or Granville Island tour.

Two things inflate a Vancouver bill: menu and shelf prices exclude the 5% GST and 7% PST added at the till, and a 15-20% tip is expected on every restaurant meal. Eating around the Granville Street bar strip is the easy way to overpay โ€” cross to Yaletown or Kitsilano for better value.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide

Airport transfers

Pre-book a transfervia Welcome Pickups

Car hire

Compare car hirevia DiscoverCars

Stay connected

Get an eSIMvia Airalo

Also in Canada

See the full Canada guide

Vancouver FAQs

How many days do you need in Vancouver?
Three full days is the practical first-timer minimum: one for Stanley Park and the West End, one for Granville Island and Gastown, and one for the North Shore mountains or Capilano. Add a fourth night if you want a relaxed pace or are continuing to Whistler or Vancouver Island.
Where should first-timers stay in Vancouver?
The Downtown West End is the safest default: you can walk straight onto the Stanley Park seawall, English Bay is at the door, and it is on the Canada Line from the airport. Yaletown is the dining-led alternative, and Kitsilano is better value if you do not mind a short bus ride into the centre.
Do you need a car in Vancouver?
Not for the city itself โ€” the seawall is walkable, SkyTrain and the SeaBus cover the wider area, and parking downtown is expensive. Only hire a car if you are driving the Sea-to-Sky Highway to Whistler (~1h45) or touring beyond town; pick it up as you leave rather than for the city days.

Ready to book?

Find hotels in Vancouver

Go