Ramada by Wyndham properties across Canada offer a consistent mid-scale experience in locations that often sit outside major urban centres - from the interior of British Columbia to the plains of Saskatchewan and the Atlantic coast of New Brunswick. These hotels are particularly useful for road trippers, regional business travellers, and families driving through areas where accommodation options thin out quickly. Each property covered here is a 3- or 4-star hotel with free parking, free WiFi, and breakfast - a combination that's hard to match at this price point in smaller Canadian cities.
What It's Like Staying in Canada
Canada is the second-largest country in the world by land area, which means that distances between destinations are not just inconvenient - they're a fundamental part of trip planning. Driving between cities in British Columbia or crossing Saskatchewan on the Trans-Canada Highway involves hours on open roads where towns are sparse and services are limited. Free parking matters here in a way it rarely does in European destinations, and hotels that include it eliminate a genuine logistical headache. Staying outside major metros like Vancouver or Toronto often means quieter surroundings, lower rates, and a more direct connection to Canada's outdoor landscape - boreal forests, river valleys, and mountain corridors that don't appear on postcard itineraries.
Canada's seasons create distinct travel windows. Summers bring long daylight hours and high road traffic, while winters in the interior provinces drop well below freezing. Around 80% of Canada's population lives within 150 km of the US border, leaving vast northern and central regions genuinely uncrowded. Travellers who prefer structured, walkable urban stays tend to gravitate toward Vancouver, Montreal, or Toronto rather than smaller cities like Moose Jaw or Williams Lake.
Pros:
- Exceptional natural landscapes accessible directly from smaller cities - mountains, lakes, and forests without resort-level crowds
- Free parking is standard at regional hotels, cutting real daily costs for road travellers
- Smaller Canadian cities offer significantly lower hotel rates than Vancouver or Toronto while maintaining brand-standard amenities
Cons:
- Distances between points of interest are long - multi-hour drives between attractions are normal, not exceptional
- Public transport outside major cities is minimal; a car is essentially mandatory in regions like the BC Interior or rural New Brunswick
- Winter travel in prairie and interior regions requires preparation for extreme cold, icy roads, and limited daylight
Why Choose Ramada by Wyndham Hotels in Canada
Ramada by Wyndham occupies a practical mid-scale tier in Canada's hotel market - consistently above budget motels but priced well below full-service upscale brands. In smaller cities and regional hubs, this brand often represents the most reliable option available, offering standardised room quality, fitness centres, and breakfast in markets where independent hotels can be unpredictable. Nightly rates at Ramada properties in smaller Canadian cities typically land significantly below comparable stays in Vancouver or Calgary, making them especially cost-effective for multi-night stops along road routes. Rooms are functional rather than design-forward, with air conditioning, private bathrooms, and flat-screen TVs as standard - no surprises, which is exactly what many travellers need mid-trip.
The brand's value proposition sharpens in locations like Williams Lake or Quesnel, where the Ramada is often one of the only full-service hotels in town. The trade-off is that these properties are not city-centre boutique experiences - common areas are modest, dining options are limited to in-house restaurants, and walkability scores are low. Around 4 out of 5 rooms across these Canadian Ramada locations include breakfast, reducing the need to source food in areas where restaurant options open late or close early.
Pros:
- Predictable room standards across locations - useful when planning multi-stop road trips through unfamiliar regions
- Free breakfast included at all properties in this selection, a meaningful saving over multiple nights
- Fitness centres, free parking, and business centres available across the board - relevant for both leisure and business travellers
Cons:
- Properties are not walkable to town centres in most cases - a car is needed even for basic errands
- Room design is functional but dated in some locations - not a consideration for travellers prioritising aesthetics
- Limited dining variety; on-site restaurants cover basics but don't substitute for a full urban food scene
Practical Booking & Area Strategy for Canada
Choosing which Ramada by Wyndham location to book depends almost entirely on your route through Canada. The two British Columbia properties - Williams Lake and Quesnel - sit along Highway 97, the main artery connecting Vancouver to Prince George and the northern interior. Both cities are staging points for outdoor activities including skiing, cycling, and fishing in the Cariboo region. Quesnel Airport is just 5 km from the local Ramada, making it one of the most airport-proximate options in this selection. Moose Jaw in Saskatchewan is a logical overnight stop between Regina and Swift Current on the Trans-Canada, with Regina International Airport 65 km away - viable for fly-drive itineraries starting in the province. Miramichi in New Brunswick serves Atlantic Canada road trips along the Miramichi River valley, a region known for salmon fishing and relatively low visitor numbers compared to the Bay of Fundy coastline.
Peak summer booking windows in Canada run from late June through August, when road traffic in BC and the Maritimes increases significantly and regional hotel availability tightens. Booking at least 6 weeks ahead during summer is strongly advisable for the Williams Lake and Quesnel properties, which serve both leisure travellers and resource-industry workers. Off-season travel in September and October offers lower rates and quieter roads without the full winter weather risk - a window worth considering for BC interior routes in particular.
Ramada Hotels in British Columbia
Both BC properties sit along Highway 97 in the Cariboo region, serving travellers moving through the province's interior. Williams Lake and Quesnel are service hubs for a large surrounding area, and these hotels are among the most complete accommodation options in their respective cities.
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1. Ramada By Wyndham Williams Lake
Show on mapCheck-infrom 15:00 until 23:59Check-outuntil 11:00Just a few rooms left at the best rate!
fromC$ 122
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2. Ramada By Wyndham
Show on mapCheck-infrom 15:00 until 23:59Check-outuntil 11:00Just a few rooms left at the best rate!
fromC$ 75
Ramada Hotels in Saskatchewan and New Brunswick
These two properties cover opposite ends of Canada's geography - one on the prairies, one on the Atlantic coast. Both serve as reliable regional stops with consistent Ramada amenities and free breakfast in markets where full-service hotels are not abundant.
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3. Ramada By Wyndham Moose Jaw
Show on mapCheck-infrom 15:00 until 23:59Check-outuntil 11:00Hurry – almost gone at this price!
fromC$ 125
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4. Ramada By Wyndham Miramichi New Brunswick
Show on mapCheck-infrom 15:00 until 23:59Check-outuntil 11:00Rooms filling fast – secure the best rate!
fromC$ 121
Smart Travel & Timing Advice for Canada
Canada's travel calendar divides sharply by region and season. For the British Columbia interior - Williams Lake and Quesnel - the optimal window is June through September, when Highway 97 is fully clear, daylight extends past 9pm, and outdoor activities including cycling and fishing are fully operational. Outside these months, early snowfall in October can disrupt mountain highway travel with limited warning. Summer rates at BC interior Ramada properties rise noticeably in July and August as both leisure travellers and resource-sector workers compete for rooms; booking at least 6 weeks out is the minimum lead time to secure preferred room types.
For Moose Jaw and the Saskatchewan prairies, spring and early autumn offer the most manageable driving conditions on the Trans-Canada. Winters in this region are severe - temperatures can drop to -30°C or below - making the sauna at the Moose Jaw Ramada genuinely functional rather than a luxury. Miramichi in New Brunswick peaks in late summer, when salmon fishing draws dedicated anglers and the region's short warm season compresses demand. A stay of two nights at any of these properties makes logistical sense - enough to use the hotel as a base for area activities without paying a premium for last-minute single-night bookings, which are common in smaller regional markets.