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Is Montreal One of North America’s Most Walkable Cities? (2026 Guide)

Yes — Montreal consistently ranks among North America’s most walkable cities, with a Walk Score above 65 island-wide and several neighbourhoods scoring 95+. The mix of dense residential streets, pedestrian-friendly mixed-use design, excellent public transit, and walkable winters (thanks to the Underground City) makes Montreal one of the easiest big cities on the continent to live without a car. Here’s what makes it so walkable, plus the 5 most pedestrian-friendly neighbourhoods.

Why Montreal Is So Walkable

  • Dense neighbourhood design: Most central Montreal neighbourhoods were built before cars dominated — narrower streets, mixed shops and homes, walkable distances to everything.
  • The Underground City (RÉSO): 33 km of climate-controlled tunnels connect metro stations, malls, hotels, and offices — making winter walking practical.
  • Metro coverage: 4 lines cover most of the central city; bus network fills the gaps.
  • BIXI bike share: 700+ stations across the island and South Shore.
  • Compact downtown: Most central attractions are within a 30-minute walk of each other.
  • Year-round sidewalks: Snow plowing on sidewalks is generally good in central neighbourhoods.

Montreal’s Walk Score vs. Other Cities

City Walk Score (city-wide)
New York 89
San Francisco 89
Boston 83
Montreal 65
Toronto 61
Vancouver 59
Chicago 78

Within Canada, Montreal regularly tops walkability rankings or ties with Toronto. Central neighbourhoods score much higher than the island average.

5 Most Walkable Montreal Neighbourhoods

1. Plateau-Mont-Royal (Walk Score: 96)

Iconic spiral staircases, dense triplexes, walkable to everything: cafés, restaurants, Mount Royal Park, Saint-Louis Square. Often ranks as Montreal’s most walkable neighbourhood.

2. Mile End (Walk Score: 95)

Bagels, coffee, street art, indie shops all within minutes. Highly walkable street grid.

3. Downtown / Centre-Ville (Walk Score: 94)

Office towers, condos, malls, McGill — all walkable plus the Underground City for winter.

4. Old Montreal (Walk Score: 92)

Cobblestone, narrow streets, completely walkable. The most “European” feeling neighbourhood.

5. Le Sud-Ouest / Saint-Henri / Little Burgundy (Walk Score: 90)

Trendy and walkable with the Lachine Canal path, Atwater Market, Notre-Dame West shops.

What Makes Other Areas Less Walkable

  • West Island: Suburban, low-density, more car-dependent
  • Far East End: Less mixed-use, longer walks to amenities
  • South Shore (Brossard, etc.): Built around malls and highways

Walking Montreal in Winter

Yes, you can walk in winter. Tips:

  • Insulated boots with good grip are non-negotiable from December–March
  • Use the Underground City for long downtown errands during cold snaps
  • Layer with windproof outer shell — wind chill is the killer, not temperature
  • Plan around plowing schedules — sidewalks are cleared within 24–48 hours of snowfall

Best Walking Routes for Visitors

  • Old Montreal loop: Notre-Dame Basilica → Place Jacques-Cartier → Old Port → Bonsecours Market (2 hours)
  • Plateau walking tour: Sherbrooke metro → Saint-Louis Square → Avenue Mont-Royal → Mile End → St-Viateur Bagels (3 hours)
  • Lachine Canal walk: Atwater Market → Old Port via the canal path (1 hour)
  • Mount Royal Park loop: Belvédère Kondiaronk → Beaver Lake → Cemetery (2–3 hours)

More Montreal Travel Guides