The oldest continuously-operating hotel in Quebec City. Opened 1870 — twenty-three years before the Frontenac.
"Quebec City's oldest hotel, opened in 1870 — older than the Frontenac, older than Confederation Canada barely is. Charles Baillairge built it, Art Deco rebuilt it, and the lobby bar has been pouring whisky to people who matter for over a century."
The Clarendon is the oldest continuously-operating hotel in Quebec City — opened in 1870, twenty-three years before the Chateau Frontenac welcomed its first guest, and still trading under the same name from the same address on Rue Sainte-Anne. That kind of longevity is rare anywhere on the continent. In Vieux-Quebec, where the rest of the streetscape is heritage by definition, the Clarendon is heritage by lineage. The hotel sits inside the UNESCO World Heritage walls of Haut-Ville, two minutes' walk from Place d'Armes and the Frontenac, three from the Dufferin Terrace boardwalk.
The original building was designed by Charles Baillairge — the architect responsible for half of nineteenth-century Quebec, including the Quebec Parliament Building's interior and several of the most important institutional structures in Lower Canada. The current facade carries his hand. The interior was reimagined in the 1930s in full Art Deco — geometric metalwork, terrazzo floors, vertical lighting, a lobby that feels less like a hotel reception than a small private club from the period when private clubs still mattered. Restoration work has been handled with restraint. Nothing has been polished into pastiche.
There are 142 rooms across the building, distributed over multiple floors and two architectural eras. Standard rooms in the heritage section retain higher ceilings and the original window proportions; rooms in the renovated wing are slightly larger and quieter. Decor is restrained — wood, linen, period-appropriate detailing, none of the hotel-by-spreadsheet uniformity that has crept into newer Vieux-Quebec properties. The premium rooms face Rue Sainte-Anne and look directly across to the Cathedral of the Holy Trinity, which is itself a piece of 1804 ecclesiastical history. Ask for a corner room on a higher floor.
The hotel houses two restaurants. Cafe-Restaurant L'Aristide is the all-day room — breakfast, lunch, lighter evenings — with a Quebecois bistro repertoire and a generous outdoor terrace in summer. The Charles Baillairge Restaurant, named for the architect, is the more formal address: classical French technique applied to local ingredients, a wine list with proper depth in Bordeaux and Burgundy, and the kind of unhurried service that makes a four-course dinner feel like a respectable use of an evening. The lobby bar runs live jazz most nights and has done so for decades.
What the Clarendon does not have, by design, is the corporate machinery of a Fairmont or the architectural drama of the Frontenac across the square. What it offers instead is the experience of staying inside the actual fabric of Vieux-Quebec — a hotel that has been at this address since 1870, run with continuity rather than reinvention. The walking-distance proximity to Place d'Armes, the Frontenac, the Citadelle, and the Petit-Champlain is unimpeachable. For travellers who care about authenticity over amenity count, the Clarendon is the Quebec City address that quietly earns its position.
For anniversaries that don't need a five-star price tag to feel significant, the Clarendon is the right choice in Vieux-Quebec. Book a heritage-wing room facing Rue Sainte-Anne, dinner at Charles Baillairge Restaurant, a nightcap in the Art Deco lobby bar with the jazz trio working through standards. The hotel has hosted anniversary stays going back generations — quite literally — and the staff handle returning couples with the kind of institutional warmth that a chain property cannot replicate.
The Clarendon is one of the most comfortable hotels in Quebec City to stay in alone. The lobby bar is convivial without being intrusive, the L'Aristide terrace is a fine place to read with a coffee, and the heritage rooms feel like a study rather than a hotel cell. Walking to the Frontenac, the Citadelle, the Petit-Champlain quarter, and the Plains of Abraham takes minutes. For a writing trip, a thinking trip, or a few days alone in one of the most atmospheric old cities in North America, the address is correct.
For honeymooning couples drawn to Quebec for the European character rather than for resort amenities, the Clarendon delivers on the heritage promise without the corporate gloss of the Frontenac. Request a higher-floor corner room with cathedral views, dinner at Charles Baillairge Restaurant on the first night, and the concierge will arrange a horse-drawn calèche from Place d'Armes through the old streets. It is a quieter honeymoon than the Frontenac offers — and for many couples, the better one.
Rates checked May 2026. Price may vary by date.
The Clarendon has been at the same Rue Sainte-Anne address since 1870 — older than the Frontenac, older than most of the country. Start with the right hotel and let Vieux-Quebec do the rest.
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