Top 20 things to do in Vancouver & nearby

things to do in vancouver

things to do in vancouver

Vancouver stacks mountains, ocean, and rainforest into one tight footprint, and you can touch all three before lunch. This run-through covers the best things to do in Vancouver, from the famous heavyweights down to a few day trips just outside the city limits.

I’ve grouped everything by area so you can plan a day without zigzagging across the map. Grab a transit card, rent a bike, and go. 🚲

Downtown and the waterfront

Start here. Most first-time places to visit in Vancouver sit within a short SkyTrain or seawall ride of the harbour.

Stanley Park is the one you can’t skip. It’s a 1,000-acre rainforest wrapped by a 10 km seawall, with totem poles, beaches, and the Vancouver Aquarium tucked inside. Rent a bike and ride the full loop in about an hour. 🌲

Granville Island sits under the Granville Bridge: a covered public market plus artisan studios and theatres. Come hungry. The Kids Market recently added an Adventure Zone with an indoor climbing area, which makes it an easy win with little ones.

Gastown is the old brick heart of the city, cobblestones and the steam clock and some of the better restaurants downtown. A few blocks north, Canada Place flies its white sails over the harbour and doubles as the cruise terminal. Walk five more minutes and Chinatown opens up, with the Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Garden hidden behind its walls, the only full-scale garden of its kind built outside China.

Two more downtown stops worth your time: Science World’s geodesic dome on False Creek, packed with hands-on exhibits, and the Vancouver Lookout, where a glass elevator shoots you 168 metres up for a 360-degree view. When the rain rolls in, the Vancouver Art Gallery on Robson Street is a dry afternoon well spent.

Downtown spot What you get
Stanley Park & Seawall 10 km bike loop, beaches, totem poles, aquarium
Granville Island Public market, food stalls, Kids Market climbing zone
Gastown Steam clock, brick lanes, top downtown dining
Canada Place Harbour views, cruise terminal, FlyOver Canada ride
Science World Hands-on exhibits, OMNIMAX dome, great for kids

Nature without leaving town

You don’t have to drive far for the big views. The North Shore mountains start about 20 minutes from downtown.

Capilano Suspension Bridge sways 70 metres above a river canyon, with a cliff walk and treetop boardwalks bolted to the rock. It’s regularly rated the top paid attraction in the city. If you’d rather not pay, Lynn Canyon nearby has its own suspension bridge for free, with thinner crowds and swimming holes below.

Grouse Mountain is the most reachable of the three local ski peaks. The Skyride tram runs about $89 round-trip and carries you 1,250 metres up in roughly eight minutes. Up top you’ll find ziplining, a lumberjack show, and two resident grizzlies from April through November. 🐻

Deep Cove is the spot for flat-water kayaking, with a beloved bakery selling honey doughnuts right by the dock. And Lonsdale Quay, a 12-minute SeaBus ride across the harbour, has a public market and patios facing the downtown skyline.

North Shore stop Quick detail
Capilano Suspension Bridge 70 m above the canyon, cliff walk, treetop boardwalks
Lynn Canyon Free suspension bridge, swimming holes, forest trails
Grouse Mountain Skyride tram ~$89, ziplining, grizzlies in summer
Deep Cove Kayaking, honey doughnuts, short Quarry Rock hike

Gardens, beaches, and museums

Vancouver does green space well, and the beaches are right in the city.

VanDusen Botanical Garden spreads 7,500 plant species across 55 acres, with an Elizabethan hedge maze worth getting lost in. Queen Elizabeth Park, the highest point in the city, looks back over downtown to the mountains, and the Bloedel Conservatory dome at its peak is full of free-flying tropical birds.

Kitsilano Beach (Kits, to locals) brings the postcard views, the volleyball nets, and a giant heated saltwater pool right on the sand. Spanish Banks further west empties out at low tide into a flat you can walk for what feels like forever. English Bay, closer to the West End, is the classic sunset spot. πŸŒ…

Out at UBC, the Museum of Anthropology holds one of the world’s best collections of Northwest Coast First Nations art, with Bill Reid’s carvings as the centrepiece. It’s one of the most rewarding things to do Vancouver locals send visitors to.

Attraction Free to enter?
Queen Elizabeth Park & viewpoint βœ… Yes
Kitsilano Beach & English Bay βœ… Yes
Lynn Canyon suspension bridge βœ… Yes
VanDusen Botanical Garden ❌ Paid ticket
Museum of Anthropology ❌ Paid ticket
Bloedel Conservatory ❌ Paid ticket

Day trips and nearby escapes

Some of the best places to visit in Vancouver aren’t actually in Vancouver.

The Sea to Sky Highway north toward Whistler ranks among the most scenic drives in Canada. Stop in Squamish for the Sea to Sky Gondola, which climbs to a suspension bridge and viewing deck over Howe Sound. Whistler itself, about 2 hours out, runs all year: skiing and snowboarding in winter, mountain biking and alpine hikes once the snow clears. ⛰️

Closer in, Steveston is a historic fishing village in Richmond, 30 minutes south, where you can buy salmon straight off the boats at Fisherman’s Wharf. And Bowen Island, a 20-minute ferry from Horseshoe Bay, makes a slow pine-covered afternoon for anyone who wants the city to disappear for a bit.

Destination Distance & why go
Sea to Sky Gondola (Squamish) ~1 hr drive, suspension bridge over Howe Sound
Whistler ~2 hr drive, skiing in winter, biking in summer
Steveston Village 30 min south, fresh dock-side salmon, old cannery
Bowen Island 20 min ferry, quiet trails and a small harbour town

Getting around

Skip the rental car if you’re staying downtown. The SkyTrain, SeaBus, and bike lanes reach most of what you’ll want, and parking near Stanley Park and Granville Island fills up fast on summer weekends. May through October gives you the mild, dry weather that makes the outdoor things to do in Vancouver actually fun. βœ…

Also Read: Travel Tweaks Offers: Why Your Friend’s Flight Cost Half as Much

FAQ

What are the top things to do in Vancouver for first-timers?
Stanley Park and its seawall, Granville Island, the Capilano Suspension Bridge, Grouse Mountain, and Gastown cover the classic five. If you have a third day, add Kitsilano Beach and the Museum of Anthropology. Those seven hit the mountains, the ocean, the food, and the culture without much backtracking.
What are the best free things to do in Vancouver?
Plenty of the best places to visit in Vancouver cost nothing. Walk the Stanley Park seawall, cross the Lynn Canyon suspension bridge, climb to the Queen Elizabeth Park viewpoint, and catch sunset at English Bay or Kits Beach. Wandering Gastown and Chinatown is free too, until the restaurants tempt you.
How many days do you need in Vancouver?
Three days is the sweet spot. Day one for downtown and the seawall, day two for the North Shore mountains, and day three for beaches, gardens, or a Sea to Sky day trip. Two days works if you stay tight to the centre, but you’ll be rushing.
What’s the best time of year to visit?
May to October. The days are long, the rain backs off, and every outdoor activity runs at full tilt. Winter has its own draw if you ski, since Grouse, Cypress, and Seymour are all inside an hour of downtown.
What things to do near Vancouver are worth the drive?
Whistler and the Sea to Sky Gondola in Squamish top the list, both reachable on one scenic highway north. Steveston Village in Richmond and a short ferry to Bowen Island round out the easy escapes if you’ve got an extra day.

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