Montréal is shiny and bright for the holidays!

Leisure activities Outdoor Winter
  • Saint-Amable Street
  • Place d'Armes
Mark Andrew Hamilton

Mark Hamilton

Montréal’s status as a City of Lights is known the world over, but the city twinkles particularly shiny and bright during the winter holiday season. Each and every year, Montréal’s neighbourhoods, shopping streets, parks and markets spruce up in their sparkling nighttime best and sparkle. Eye-popping illuminations thrill visitors and locals of all ages all winter long, while spectacular seasonal installations guarantee some unforgettable #mtlmoments sure to capture the imaginations of friends and loved ones back home.

Place d'Armes and Notre-Dame Basilica of Montréal

The gorgeous snow globe of Old Montréal

Under a blanket of snow, Old Montréal is a glowing storybook winter wonderland that’s the definition of postcard-pretty photogenic. The iconic quartier’s holiday lighting offer countless shimmering vistas down cobblestone streets and across building facades, while neighbourhood shops go all out in decorating their entrances and windows sure to bring feelings of comfort and joy. Québec’s first declared historical monument the Château Ramezay spends the holiday season bedecked in lights, hosting old-fashioned holiday traditions like stocking-making and singsongs around the fireplace. After taking in the beaming archways and domes of Montréal City Hall,, Marché Bonsecours and its neighbouring Notre-Dame-de-Bon-Secours Chapel and Marguerite Bourgeoys Historic Site's facade and lookout towers, head for the Notre-Dame Basilica* and Place d’Armes with its epic-sized star installations. End your wander at the stately Place Jacques-Cartier for some fresh maple syrup candies and to warm your hands over an open fire.

* And speaking of eye-popping projections, no description of Montréal’s twinkling lights would be complete without the popular AURA Experiencebringing the Notre-Dame Basilica’s interior to vibrant life with fully immersive cutting-edge light mapping technology. It’s also the perfect way to warm up on an evening winter walk through the neighbourhood.

Enchanted Worlds, Ogilvy

Bustling and beaming shopping streets

All over town, Montréal’s shopping streets from Ahuntsic to the Plateau-Mont-Royal and Mile EndOutremont to Lachine are all cozily a-twinkle with draping lights and glimmering storefront decorations. The bedazzling installations that transform Promenade Wellington into The Pôle Well further increase the charm quotient on one of the world’s coolest streets, while Mont-Royal Avenue’s trees are lit up in a rainbow’s worth of colours accompanied by Mon Beau Sapin’s choirs and Christmas tree market at Place des Fleurs-de-Macadam. Charming Peel Street’s hanging tree lights lend a romantic air, and every year the towering installations on busy Sainte-Catherine Street raise holiday excitement to an epic level. And once your shopping is done, the old school animatronic window displays from the upscale Ogilvy department store created in the 1940s and now residing at the McCord Stewart Museum are placed out front for all to experience free of charge, still thrilling Montréalers decade after decade.

The Great Christmas Market

Dreamy Christmas markets

From November 21, 2025 to January 4, 2025Noël Montréal brings two uniquely charming Christmas Markets to the city, guaranteeing something for everyone in the family. The Great Montréal Christmas Market transforms the Quartier des Spectacles and Place des Arts into a charming holiday village modelled on the world famous German Weihnachtsmarkt, while the Montréal Christmas Village at the Atwater Market is the perfect go-to for artisanal decorations, locally-produced tasty treats and warming cups of hot cocoa. Both also offer an advent’s calendar worth of special events and surprises, including cheesy raclette parties and performances.

Those looking for the perfect Christmas tree need look no further than the Jean-Talon Market, where some of the best trees await their holiday homes. And all throughout the season, these three markets also feature free activities for kids and adults alike.

Wniter Montreal - Lumino

Hey-ho, let’s Lumino!

It’s no mere pun to proclaim Lumino as an annual highlight (see what we did there?) in the Quartier des Spectacles calendar. For the 2025-2026 edition running November 27, 2025 to March 8, 2026, Lumino’s cutting-edge and playful installations shine from the Place des Festivals to the Esplanade Tranquille skating rink (with skate rental right on hand, no less), and down Sainte-Catherine Street all the way to stately Phillips SquareEach winter, all-new installations paired with some past favourites from this long-running series light up the winter streets like nothing else, and many can be triggered and controlled by you!

MEM - Centre des mémoires montréalaises

Signs of Montréal past

Providing a sparkling welcome at the entryway of the MEM—Centre des mémoires montréalaises, the Montréal Signs Project acts as a retirement home for some of the most beloved signage from Montréal’s neon age, recalling shopping seasons of years past. Featuring long lost businesses like La Maison du Chien Chaud Restaurant, Warshaw supermarket and Imperial Boots, the Montréal Signs Project commemorates a bygone era of shining design and holiday memories. (And if you want to see more, the collection’s original home on the Concordia University Loyola Campus in the Notre-Dame-de-Grâce neighbourhood features many other iconic greats).

Christmas in the park

Village lights (and Christmas in the Park!)

A year-round gathering place, the buzzing Les Jardins Gamelin plays host to the annual Christmas in the Park festival from December 5 to 24, 2025. Filled with music, games and treats, it’s the perfect city centre holiday activity hub. It’s also the entry point into the charming streets of Montréal’s Village, lit up nightly along Sainte–Catherine Street east of Berri Street by 140 lamps spotlighting the sexual and gender diversity flags raised in pride by the LGBTQQIP2SAA community reflecting all the colours of the rainbow. Don’t forget to tag your photos with #ProudColoursMtl!

The Ring at the Esplanade Place Ville Marie

Quartier by quartier

Proud locals are also known for decking the halls with picture perfect lights and trimmings down every street, so a wander through any of Montréal’s iconic neighbourhoods is sure to bring sparkle around every turn. We’d suggest a stroll through Square Saint-Louis, past the stately homes and high streets of the English-speaking enclave of Westmount, through epic and glowing Dorchester Square—Place du Canada, down the streets of the Plateau and Mile End and past the towering skyscrapers and the iconic Ring of Downtown with cameras at the ready. And finally, some of Montréal’s latest and greatest shines brightly in the southwest borough of Saint-Henri, along Villeray’s lively streets and throughout riverfront Verdun. And from February to April, city and countryside sugar shacks celebrate maple syrup harvest season with classic Québécois cuisine including steaming tourtières, sweetened pea soup and the must-eat maple sweet tire d’érable, all with a view of Montréal’s glow in the distance.

It’s always a good idea to pick up Tourisme Montréal’s seasonally-updated Passeport MTL, stuffed with special deals and savings to take in some of the city’s must-see attractions and culinary delights, all aglow with holiday cheer.

Montréal en lumière - Scotia Bank Skate Path

Glimmer and glitter beyond the holiday season

Just because the holiday season has ended doesn’t mean Montréal stops shining, and February 27 to March 7, 2026MONTRÉAL EN LUMIÈRE returns for its 27th edition in the Quartier des Spectacles. Bright lights, family friendly amusement rides, fine dining and flash mob performances have helped keep the winter moving for a over a quarter of a century! And this year, back celebrating its 23rd edition on February 28, 2026Nuit blanche à Montréal keeps local museums and other cultural locations up all night long with special exhibitions and performances. The full line-up and further information is available on their website.

Many of Montréal’s public artworks also get spruced up in their wintertime best, with special lighting installations and other glow-ups to keep the season bright. Permanent installations like the newly-iconic The Ring at Esplanade Place Ville Marie never look better than on a frosty winter night, with great views of the Jacques-Cartier Bridge that glows in colour-shifting shades befitting the time of year

La Buvette du Dep - Saint-Laurent

A hidden gem in the Mile End

The incredibly Instagrammable La Buvette du Dep (Saint-Laurent) in the Plateau neighbourhood unveils the La Taverne de Noël, open from November 2025 to mid-January 2026. Keep your eyes peeled for the glowing choir of lit-up Santas out front, and enter into a winter wonderland draped with tinsel, ornaments and holiday cheer. The special limited-time menu features gourmet hot chocolates, seasonal cocktails and yummy snacks with the nostalgic flavours of holiday gatherings from years past. And as is typical at Le Petit Dep’s four locations across the city, the focus is on Québec-made artisanal products and tastes. Drop in for a drink and hangout or book the space for your own year-end celebrations—it’s available for private functions for just you and your closest friends, along with a list of suggested local DJs to provide the ambiance. 

Crescent Street | Tower of Songs, Hommage à Leonard Cohen - mural by El Mac and Gene Pendon, MU, 2017

Portraits under lights

Some of Montréal’s most beloved citizens are memorialized in large-scale murals, including musician and poet Leonard Cohen (who has two, one near Concordia University on Crescent Street and another off of Saint-Laurent Boulevard, a few steps from Schwartz’s deli), author Mordecai Richler and athlete Jackie Robinson. There’s also murals aplenty by international artists all up and down the Main (the local nickname for Saint-Laurent Boulevard), and more added every year during the summer’s MURAL Festival that are sure to add some colour to your evening winter snaps of the city. 

Mark Andrew Hamilton

Mark Hamilton

Mark Hamilton is the community director for QueerMTL, an internationally-touring musician with his projects Woodpigeon and Frontperson  and a graduate studies student of history researching LGBTQ+ activism in the city. He’s lived in Montréal since 2015, during which time he’s most often spotted atop a BIXI bike usally running a few minutes late.

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