Alberta — Rockies, Ranches and Oilfields
Capital: Edmonton · Population: approximately 4.8 million · Joined Confederation: 1905
Alberta spent most of the 20th century as a ranching-and-farming province with a reputation for blue skies and conservative politics. Oil changed everything in the 1940s, and then again in the 1970s and 2000s. Today the province has a per-capita GDP higher than any Canadian peer, a fiscal regime built around resource revenues, a tech sector rapidly growing in Calgary, and a population that's younger than the national average (the median Albertan is about 37 years old).
For visitors, the province divides neatly into three. The mountains — Banff, Lake Louise, Jasper, Waterton — are what most international tourists come for. The cities — Calgary in the south, Edmonton in the central belt — are where most Albertans actually live. The prairie — the area east of Highway 2, the dinosaur badlands, the small grain-elevator towns — is the part almost no one sees, and it's where a lot of the province's character actually is.
A Compact History
Cree, Blackfoot, Tsuut'ina, Stoney Nakoda and Métis peoples have been on this land for thousands of years. The Hudson's Bay Company fur trade brought Europeans in the late 1700s. The territory was part of Rupert's Land until 1870, then the North-West Territories, and finally became its own province in 1905 alongside Saskatchewan.
The first oil boom came at Leduc in 1947, when the Leduc No. 1 well struck what turned out to be a very large oilfield. The oil sands of northern Alberta — around Fort McMurray — have been exploited commercially since 1967. The province has gone through several boom-bust cycles since then, most recently a sharp downturn in 2015-2016 that reshaped Calgary in particular.
Calgary
Calgary is Alberta's largest city, a metropolitan area of about 1.67 million people at the point where the prairie meets the foothills of the Rockies. It sits at an elevation of about 1,045 metres, which is higher than Denver — a fact that explains, among other things, why the air is drier and the sunsets are more dramatic than on the flat prairie.
Is Calgary just cowboys and oil?
That's the stereotype and it's not completely wrong. The Calgary Stampede every July is a huge civic event (more than 1.2 million attendees) and the energy sector is still the largest private employer. But Calgary has diversified significantly since 2015. Tech companies (Shopify's Canadian engineering hub, RBC Ventures, various fintechs) have moved in, film and television production is growing, and the city's population is younger and more international than many people expect. About 32 percent of Calgarians are foreign-born, roughly comparable to Montreal.
What neighbourhoods are worth exploring?
Downtown Calgary has a distinctive street life. The +15 Skywalk — a network of elevated indoor walkways — connects more than 100 buildings across 18 kilometres, which is useful in January when it's -25°C outside. Kensington, across the Bow River from downtown, is the walkable shopping-and-restaurant neighbourhood. Inglewood, east of downtown along 9 Avenue SE, is the oldest part of the city and has been slowly gentrifying for twenty years. Mission, along 4 Street SW, is the patio district.
Outside downtown, Bridgeland (Italian-Ukrainian-turned-hipster), Ramsay (artsy and industrial) and Bowness (west-end river neighbourhood) are worth exploring. Further out, Fish Creek Provincial Park in the south is one of the largest urban parks in North America.
Is Calgary expensive?
Less than Toronto or Vancouver; more than Edmonton. A one-bedroom apartment downtown runs CAD $1,600 to $2,000 in early 2026. The benchmark detached house is around CAD $700,000. No provincial sales tax means your grocery and retail bills are a couple of percent lower than in most other provinces.
What's the weather really like?
Unpredictable. Chinook winds can lift the temperature by 20°C in a few hours in the middle of winter; it's not unusual to have a January day above 10°C followed by a January day below -20°C. Summer is dry, sunny, and comfortably warm (daily highs around 23°C in July). Snow can fall any month of the year; in 2019 Calgary had snow on the first week of September and again in mid-May.
What are the Rockies from Calgary like?
Close. Banff is a 90-minute drive west on the Trans-Canada Highway. Kananaskis Country is 45 minutes. You can leave downtown at 6 a.m., be at Lake Louise by 9, hike for four hours, and be back in Calgary for dinner. Very few large cities in the world have mountains of that calibre that close.
Edmonton
Edmonton is the provincial capital, a metropolitan area of about 1.5 million in the geographic centre of Alberta. It sits on the North Saskatchewan River, much of it along a spectacular river valley that is one of the largest urban parks in North America (larger, by area, than Central Park, Stanley Park and Vondelpark combined).
How is Edmonton different from Calgary?
Edmontonians will tell you their city has a culture Calgary doesn't. Edmonton has the provincial government, the University of Alberta, the legislature, the Fringe Festival (the largest and longest-running fringe theatre festival in North America), and more publicly subsidized arts institutions than Calgary. It's also colder in winter (further north, no Chinook effect), flatter, and has a smaller skyline. Calgary is the corporate headquarters city; Edmonton is the government-and-arts city.
Is West Edmonton Mall actually worth visiting?
It was the largest shopping mall in the world from 1981 to 2004 and it's still North America's largest. It has a water park, an indoor ice rink, an amusement park, a replica of Santa Maria in a lake, and somewhere around 800 stores. It's a genuinely strange place. If you have a half-day and you like kitsch-on-an-epic-scale, go. If you hate malls, skip.
What else should I do in Edmonton?
Walk the river valley. Go to the Muttart Conservatory (four glass pyramids full of different climate biomes, very photogenic). Take a tour of the Alberta Legislature. Eat on 124 Street or in Old Strathcona, the neighbourhood around Whyte Avenue across the river. If you're there in August, the Fringe Festival is the city at its best.
Banff & Lake Louise
Banff is a town of about 8,300 people inside Banff National Park, Canada's oldest national park (1885). Lake Louise is a hamlet of about 1,000 people 55 kilometres further north. Between them they host about 4 million visitors a year.
When's the best time to visit Banff?
Depends what you want. Late June through mid-September is the peak: hiking trails clear of snow, wildflowers out, long daylight hours. Expect crowds, especially at Lake Louise and Moraine Lake. October can be beautiful (larches turn gold in the last two weeks of September into the first of October) but snow can arrive any time. Winter (late November to early April) is quieter in town, busy at the ski resorts (Sunshine Village, Lake Louise Ski Resort, Mount Norquay). May and November are proper shoulder seasons — cheap hotels, limited activities, not much colour.
Is Moraine Lake really closed to cars?
Yes, since 2023. You can only reach it by Parks Canada shuttle bus, by Roam transit bus, by commercial bus tour, on foot (14 km), or by bike. Book the shuttle in advance — in peak season it sells out weeks ahead. Lake Louise still has a parking lot but it fills by 7 a.m. in summer; use the Park & Ride at the Lake Louise Ski Resort.
How much does Banff cost?
A lot. A decent hotel room in Banff town in July runs CAD $400-$800 a night. The Fairmont Banff Springs, the famous castle-like hotel, is upwards of CAD $700 even in shoulder season. Camping is dramatically cheaper (CAD $30-$50 per site) but reservations open five months ahead and sell out in minutes for the best sites. A national park pass is CAD $11 per adult per day or $75 per year for a family.
Is Banff worth it given the crowds?
Yes, if you're willing to walk. The parking lots and the town and the lakeshore viewpoints are crowded. The moment you get two kilometres up a trail, you're essentially alone. A hike to Lake Agnes Tea House from Lake Louise, or to Helen Lake off the Icefields Parkway, will show you what the park actually is.
Jasper
Jasper is Banff's quieter, larger, northern sibling. Jasper National Park is actually bigger than Banff (10,878 km² versus 6,641), the town is smaller (about 4,700 people), and the wildlife is easier to find. Elk and bighorn sheep wander the edge of the town; wolves and grizzly bears are genuinely present in the backcountry.
Is Jasper still recoverable after the 2024 wildfire?
The 2024 Jasper wildfire burned through the townsite in late July, destroying roughly a third of the buildings. Rebuilding has been ongoing since late 2024 and the town is partially operational but not fully; check the current status before booking. The surrounding park, Maligne Canyon, the Columbia Icefield and the Icefields Parkway are largely unaffected and worth the trip.
How do I get to Jasper?
Drive. Jasper is about 4 hours from Edmonton and 4 hours from Banff via the Icefields Parkway. VIA Rail's Canadian transcontinental train passes through Jasper three times a week and is the most scenic way to arrive if you have the time. There is no major airport in Jasper itself.
Lethbridge & Southern Alberta
Lethbridge, population about 105,000, is the largest city in southern Alberta, 215 km south of Calgary. It's a coulee city (the Oldman River has carved deep ravines through it), a university town, and the traditional service centre for the surrounding ranching country. Just east is the dinosaur country of the Red Deer River badlands and the town of Drumheller, home to the Royal Tyrrell Museum — one of the best paleontology museums in the world. The Canadian Rockies get most of the attention, but the badlands are arguably Alberta's strangest landscape, and the Tyrrell is worth a detour on any trip between Calgary and Saskatoon.
Further south, Waterton Lakes National Park sits on the Montana border and is the quieter, shorter, prettier cousin of Banff. Fewer visitors, smaller lakes, more wildflowers. An overlooked corner of the province that's worth two or three days if you have them.
Fort McMurray & the Oil Sands
Fort McMurray sits in northern Alberta on the Athabasca River, population about 68,000 at the 2021 census (down from a 2013 peak of 76,000 after the 2016 wildfire and the oil-price crash). It's the centre of the oil sands industry — bitumen mining and in-situ extraction that produces most of the crude oil Canada exports to the United States. For almost all visitors, Fort McMurray is not a destination; it's the place the oil comes from, and a subject of ongoing environmental and political debate.
Alberta FAQs
Does Alberta really have no sales tax?
No provincial sales tax, correct. You still pay the 5 percent federal GST on most things. It's the only province in Canada without a PST or HST. A shopping day in Calgary costs meaningfully less than the same day in Toronto — 8 percent less, if the goods were taxable.
What's a Chinook?
A warm, dry wind that comes over the Rockies from the Pacific in winter. It can raise temperatures in Calgary by 15 to 25°C in a few hours. A classic Chinook morning: -20°C at dawn, +8°C by lunch. The price is headaches — Chinooks are widely blamed for migraines — and rapid snowmelt.
Do I need a car to see Alberta?
If you want to see the Rockies, yes. There are shuttle services from Calgary and Edmonton airports to Banff and Jasper (Brewster, SunDog, Banff Airporter) but they're expensive and inflexible. Renting a car in Calgary gives you access to the best of Banff, Kananaskis, the Icefields Parkway and Jasper over a five-to-seven-day trip. Outside the mountains, the cities themselves have decent transit.
What time zone is Alberta in?
Mountain Time (UTC-7 in winter, UTC-6 in summer with daylight saving). Same as Saskatchewan in winter, but different in summer because Saskatchewan doesn't observe DST. Two hours behind Toronto in winter and summer.
Is the Calgary Stampede worth it?
If you're the kind of person who enjoys big civic festivals, yes. It's ten days of rodeo, chuckwagon racing, midway rides, concerts, and a collective agreement to wear Western wear. If you hate crowds and country music, no. Book accommodation six months ahead if you want to go — Stampede week is the busiest hotel week of the year in Calgary.
Can I see the Northern Lights in Alberta?
Sometimes. Northern Alberta (Fort McMurray, Peace River, High Level) sees auroras dozens of nights a year. Edmonton and Calgary catch them a handful of times a winter during strong geomagnetic storms. For reliable viewing, go to Yellowknife in the Northwest Territories instead.