The Waterfront Trail is a 3600-km-long, hiking, cycling and walking trail that connects communities along the Canadian shores of the Great Lakes and the St Lawrence River in Ontario. Most of it is on paved roads.
Understand
[edit | edit source]The Waterfront Trail is a project by the Waterfront Regeneration Trust, a charity to protect Ontario's waterfronts. The trail is intended to serve as a way to connect various communities to the waterfronts in order to build awareness and encourage community pride in their bodies of water.
Prepare
[edit | edit source]PDF maps are available from the official Waterfront Trail website. While most of the communities that are connected to the trail have amenities, you might find that they're underdeveloped and perhaps inferior to simply camping. The communities can also be separated by dozens of kilometres in some cases, so it would be prudent to pack extra food and water before leaving a town.
Get in
[edit | edit source]The Waterfront Trail can be accessed from over 150 communities. The trails can be identified by their distinctive logo.

Bike
[edit | edit source]The trail is split in several sections. While it can be traveled in any direction, this article assumes that you're travelling from west to east.
From Pigeon River to Sault Ste Marie (Ontario)
[edit | edit source]This segment of the trail begins at Pigeon River, which is part of the US-Canada border. From there, you bike along the coast of Lake Superior, passing through Thunder Bay and White River in the process.
From Sault Ste Marie to Espanola
[edit | edit source]This segment begins in Gros Cap, a conservation area near Lake Superior. Most of this trail is on paved roads and passes through over 2 dozen communities, most of them very minor but usually having some sort of amenity. At Espanola, you can choose to either go to Manitoulin Island, largest freshwater island in the world, or you can continue onward to Sudbury, which is home to over 300 lakes.
From Sudbury to Bruce Peninsula
[edit | edit source]This segment hugs the shore of the Georgian Bay and passes through Parry Sound. This section of the trail doesn't have signage (as of 2025), which can make it easy to get lost. At the end of this section, you end up close to Manitoulin Island again, although you can only travel between the island and the peninsula by a ferry during spring and summer.
From Bruce Peninsula to Sarnia
[edit | edit source]This segment takes you from the peninsula across the shore of Lake Huron.
From Sarnia to Windsor
[edit | edit source]This segment of the trail takes you along the coast of Lake St Clair, bringing right up to the US-Canada border again.
From Windsor to Niagara Falls (Ontario)
[edit | edit source]This segment takes you along the shore of Lake Erie.
From Niagara Falls to Kingston
[edit | edit source]This segment takes you along Lake Ontario. Unlike most of the other segments of the trail, this one takes you through several large communities, such as Hamilton and Toronto.
From Kingston to the Quebec border
[edit | edit source]This segment takes you along the Saint Lawrence River. This portion of the trail is mostly off-road but does require you to do about 80 km of on-road cycling with little to no shoulder. You can also take a detour to Wolfe Island, where the trail takes you around the island's circumference. The government of Ontario operates a free ferry that runs between Kingston and the island roughly once an hour.

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