Quebec City's only Relais & Chateaux. 17th-century foundations beneath, wood-burning fireplaces above.
"Quebec City's only Relais & Chateaux, and the most personal luxury hotel in Canada. The archaeological digs in the corridors are not a gimmick — they are the building. Stay in a suite with a wood-burning fireplace and a view across the St. Lawrence, and you understand why couples return for the 25th anniversary."
Auberge Saint-Antoine sits on Rue Saint-Antoine in Vieux-Quebec Basse-Ville, two minutes' walk from the cobblestoned Quartier Petit-Champlain and the St. Lawrence quay. It is the only Relais & Chateaux property in Quebec City, and one of a small handful in eastern Canada. Five-star, ninety-five rooms, family-owned by the Price family for three generations — and built directly atop 17th-century French colonial stone foundations that the family chose to expose rather than bury when they expanded the property. The result is a hotel that doubles as a museum of itself.
The archaeological integration is what separates Auberge Saint-Antoine from every other luxury hotel in Canada. When the Price family excavated the site for renovation, they uncovered centuries of relics — clay pipes, glassware, military buttons, leather shoes, ceramics from the wharf trade — and rather than relegate them to a storeroom, they commissioned bespoke display cases throughout the public spaces and corridors. Each artifact is labelled with the level it was recovered from. Walking from the lobby to your room, you pass through 400 years of Quebec history without leaving the building. The original stone walls of the 17th-century maritime warehouses are still visible in the lounge, the breakfast room, and several of the lower suites.
Panache, the hotel restaurant, occupies the second floor of an 1822 maritime warehouse with the original wooden beams and stone walls intact. The kitchen is committed to Quebec terroir — game from the Charlevoix region, Gaspé seafood, foraged ingredients from the Laurentians, dairy from the Île d'Orléans. The wine list is one of the strongest in the city for Canadian and French selections. Reserve a table by the fireplace on a winter evening and the case for staying in Quebec City rather than Montreal makes itself.
Rooms range from Classic Doubles to River Suites with private terraces facing the St. Lawrence. The signature feature, on the upper-tier suites, is the wood-burning fireplace — actual logs, actual flame, properly drafted. There are not many hotels in North America that still permit this; the Auberge has preserved the licence and the chimneys. In a Quebec City January, with the snow falling on the river outside the window, a wood-burning fireplace inside your suite is the kind of detail that justifies the entire trip. Ask for the 8400-series for the river view, or the Foundation Suites if you want exposed 17th-century stone walls.
Service at the Auberge is unhurried and personal in the way that only family-owned hotels manage. Staff turnover is low, and the concierge has the relationships that come from twenty-year tenures with the surrounding restaurants, ferry operators, and the Hôtel du Parlement. The Price family is regularly on the property. They greet returning guests by name — and they remember which suite you stayed in, what wine you ordered, and whether you took the morning ferry to Lévis last time. This is the most personal luxury experience in Canada, and the reason couples return for honeymoons, tenth anniversaries, and twenty-fifth anniversaries with reliable frequency.
A river-view suite with a wood-burning fireplace, the cobblestones of Petit-Champlain at your front door, and Panache for the first dinner together as a married couple. Ask the concierge to arrange a horse-drawn calèche through Place Royale at dusk and a private morning visit to the Notre-Dame-des-Victoires church before the crowds arrive. The Auberge does honeymoons with the discretion and warmth of a family that has hosted them for three generations — there is no honeymoon hotel in Canada more suited to a quiet, properly romantic week.
For tenth, twentieth, and twenty-fifth anniversaries, the Auberge maintains a returning-guest programme that remembers your suite preference, fireplace lighting time, and what you ordered at Panache last visit. Suite upgrades for repeat couples are handled generously and quietly. A wood-burning fireplace, a bottle of Charlevoix cider already in the room, and the St. Lawrence frozen white outside the window in February — this is how to mark a long marriage without performance. The Price family will know your name by the second visit, and that is its own kind of luxury.
For couples who want the most private proposal in Quebec City, the Auberge is the answer. Brief the concierge once — the suite ready with champagne, a private table at Panache by the fireplace, the calèche waiting at the appointed hour through Petit-Champlain — and they will handle the choreography with discretion no chain hotel can match. The Foundation Suites with exposed 17th-century stone walls are the proposal rooms. Request one specifically and tell the concierge what time you intend to ask the question.
Rates checked May 2026. Price may vary by date.
Auberge Saint-Antoine is the most intimate luxury hotel in Canada. Wood-burning fireplaces, river-view suites, and the Price family on first-name terms. Begin with the right address.
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