On Chesterman Beach, at the western edge of Vancouver Island. The hotel that invented storm-watching.
"The hotel that invented Pacific storm-watching — and still does it better than anyone else."
The Wickaninnish Inn is a family story before it is a hotel story. Charles McDiarmid grew up on Chesterman Beach, the son of a country doctor who bought the rocky promontory in the 1950s. When Charles returned to Tofino in the 1990s after a career in international hospitality, he and his family — father Howard, mother Lynn, and siblings — built the inn themselves on the headland where he had played as a child. They opened in 1996 with a thesis nobody else in North American hospitality believed: that the rainy, gale-battered Pacific winter was not a season to apologise for, but the entire point.
That thesis became a category. The McDiarmids coined the term "storm-watching" and built the Wick around it — floor-to-ceiling windows, fireplaces in every room, soaker tubs facing the surf, slickers and boots stocked at the door. From November through March, Pacific systems track straight into Vancouver Island's western shore, throwing twenty-foot swells against the basalt outcrops directly below the rooms. Guests now travel from across the world specifically for the storms. Every other Pacific Northwest lodge that markets winter weather is following the playbook the Wick wrote.
The property has 75 rooms across two buildings: The Pointe, the original 1996 inn perched on the rocky headland, and The Beach, the 2003 addition tucked into the rainforest behind the dunes. Rooms in The Pointe are the iconic ones — corner units with wraparound glass, recycled-cedar interiors by Vancouver Island craftsmen, and ocean views that begin at the bedside. The Beach rooms are quieter, more secluded, and slightly more spacious — better for guests who want the rainforest behind them and the beach a thirty-second walk away. Both buildings are Relais & Châteaux properties, which on the West Coast of Canada means almost nothing to nobody except the small, serious club of guests who recognise it as a guarantee.
The Pointe Restaurant is the dining room that put Tofino on the Pacific Northwest culinary map. Floor-to-ceiling windows wrap 240 degrees around the surf; the tasting menu draws on what the boats brought in that morning, what the foragers pulled from the rainforest, and what the Coastal First Nations cookbooks have always known. Spot prawn, sablefish, sea urchin, salmonberry, fiddleheads, kelp. The wine list is one of the deepest collections of British Columbia and Pacific Northwest bottles in North America. Reserve a window table at sunset on arrival night.
Ancient Cedars Spa, perched above the surf in The Pointe, runs treatments built around the rainforest itself — hot stone massage with stones warmed in cedar steam, a Hishuk Ish Ts'awalk ritual developed with local Nuu-chah-nulth practitioners, salt scrubs from the very ocean visible through the window. This is the most romantic single hotel in Canada, and the right time to visit is November through February — when the storms are largest, the dining room is at its warmest, and the case for being indoors with someone you love is at its strongest.
For couples who want the antithesis of a Caribbean resort — wild Pacific surf, cedar-lined rooms with fireplaces, and rainforest walks instead of cocktail bars — the Wick is the most romantic single property in Canada. Book a Pointe corner suite for the panoramic surf view, or a Beach building room for the quiet rainforest setting. The Pointe Restaurant tasting menu on the first night, an Ancient Cedars couples treatment the next morning, and a long Chesterman Beach walk in between.
Anniversaries at the Wick reward returning. The hotel keeps detailed guest histories — the room you stayed in last time, the wine you ordered at The Pointe, the spa treatments that worked. Returning guests are upgraded generously when occupancy permits, and the McDiarmid family ethic of personal greeting is genuine, not performed. Come back in storm season, take a corner suite in The Pointe, and watch the same Pacific that drew you here the first time make the case for the next decade together.
Ancient Cedars Spa is the rare hotel spa where the setting and the treatments are inseparable from the place itself — cedar steam, ocean salt scrubs, hot stones, and the Nuu-chah-nulth-informed rituals that you cannot replicate in any other city. Pair it with rainforest hiking in nearby Pacific Rim National Park, surf lessons on Chesterman Beach, and the kind of digital silence that long flights to Tofino enforce. Three nights is the minimum; five is the right answer.
Rates checked May 2026. Price may vary by date.
Wickaninnish Inn invented the storm-watching honeymoon. Start with the right hotel, then let the Pacific close the deal.
See All Honeymoon HotelsNew hotel openings, deal alerts, and occasion-specific guides — weekly.