Table of content
- Where Is the Cheapest Place to Go on Vacation from Canada?
- Top Cheap Vacation Destinations for Canadians in 2026
- Southeast Asia: Vietnam, Thailand, and the Philippines
- Latin America and the Caribbean: Mexico, Guatemala, and Colombia
- Where Are Canadians Going on Vacation in 2026?
- What Is the Most Affordable Place to Vacation for Canadian Families?
- Which Country Is Best for Travel on a Low Budget?
- How to Stay Connected at Cheap Vacation Destinations Without Big Three Roaming Costs
- Underrated Cheap Vacation Spots Worth Adding to Your 2026 List

Frequently Asked Questions
The cheapest vacation destinations from Canada in 2026 are Vietnam, Guatemala, Mexico outside the resort corridor, and Albania when return flights, accommodation, and daily costs are tallied together. A solo two-week trip to Vietnam including return airfare typically runs around $2,500 to $3,500 CAD. Three key variables determine true affordability: flight distance from your departure city, local cost-of-living once you land, and the Canadian dollar's strength against that country's currency.
For most Canadians, Mexico's Riviera Maya and the Dominican Republic offer the strongest combination of flight cost, accommodation, food, and amenities. A family of four can find seven-night all-inclusive packages to Cancun or Punta Cana from roughly $4,500 CAD including return flights during shoulder season. Solo and couple travellers will find Vietnam and Guatemala offer some of the lowest daily costs globally, ranging from $30 to $55 CAD per day.
The United States, Mexico, the Dominican Republic, Cuba, and Jamaica remain the five most popular international destinations for Canadians according to Statistics Canada travel data. Europe is gaining ground, with Portugal and Greece seeing rising Canadian arrivals. A growing segment is turning toward Colombia, Vietnam, and Albania for more local texture at lower daily costs.
Vietnam, Albania, Georgia, Guatemala, and Indonesia outside Bali consistently rank as the strongest options for low-budget travel in 2026 measured by all-in daily spend in CAD. Vietnam offers daily costs of roughly $35 to $55 CAD, while Guatemala sits even lower at $30 to $50 CAD per day. Albania surprises many Canadians with Adriatic beaches and strong value at around $60 to $70 CAD per day.
Vietnam, Thailand, and the Philippines are the top budget-friendly Southeast Asia destinations for Canadians. Vietnam's daily costs range from $35 to $55 CAD, Thailand from $50 to $80 CAD, and the Philippines from $40 to $65 CAD. Return flights from YVR typically run $900 to $1,300 CAD, while YYZ departures average $1,100 to $1,500 CAD with one stop.
Yes, Latin America offers strong value for Canadians with shorter flight times than Southeast Asia. Guatemala's daily budget sits at $30 to $50 CAD, Colombia ranges from $50 to $70 CAD, and independent travel in Mexico runs $55 to $75 CAD per day. Both the Colombian peso and Guatemalan quetzal have remained favourable against the CAD, stretching purchasing power further than the headline exchange rate suggests.
Shoulder season, broadly May or November for most popular destinations, reduces airfare by roughly 20 to 40 percent compared to peak-season pricing. For all-inclusive packages, late April, May, and early November offer the sharpest price drops while weather holds in most sun destinations. These windows cut all-inclusive package prices by 20 to 35 percent from peak January and February rates.
For families, all-inclusive packages often undercut DIY beach travel on total price. A family of four can find seven-night all-inclusive packages to the Caribbean from roughly $4,500 CAD including return flights in shoulder season. DIY family travel in Europe runs $250 to $350 CAD per day plus transatlantic flights, placing it in roughly the same total range as a higher-tier all-inclusive.
Departure city shapes your options as much as destination does. Montreal-Trudeau carries a denser direct European route network than Toronto Pearson, which frequently translates to lower base fares on transatlantic routes. Vancouver International offers stronger routing to Asia and the South Pacific, often undercutting equivalent Toronto connections by a meaningful margin on base price.
Eastern Europe, including Albania, Georgia, and North Macedonia, offers genuinely lean daily costs. However, getting there from Canada requires a transatlantic flight plus at least one European connection, and that base flight cost reshapes the all-in total considerably compared to a direct hop to Mexico or a charter to the Caribbean. Albania at around $60 to $70 CAD per day offers Adriatic beaches at strong value once you account for the full journey cost.
A solo two-week trip to Vietnam including return airfare from Toronto or Vancouver typically runs approximately $2,500 to $3,500 CAD. Daily costs on the ground range from $35 to $55 CAD, with Hanoi and Hoi An running roughly 25 percent cheaper than Ho Chi Minh City for comparable guesthouses and meals. The best travel window is February to April, with one-stop flights available from both YVR and YYZ.
Cuba remains one of the cheapest all-inclusive options from Canada, though amenity and food quality vary sharply between resort tiers. Caribbean packages broadly range from $1,200 to $2,000 CAD per person for seven nights including flights, available on charter services from Toronto, Montreal, and Halifax airports. Shoulder season booking in May or November delivers the lowest pricing within this category.
Regional eSIM plans for Southeast Asia start at roughly $10 to $18 CAD for 5 GB of data. Budget eSIM plans covering destinations like Vietnam, Thailand, and the Philippines are widely available from travel eSIM providers covering 190-plus destinations. As a usage reference, 5 GB across 14 days works out to roughly 350 MB per day, sufficient for navigation and messaging but tight if video calls are frequent.
Yes, independent travel in Mexico outside the resort corridor offers strong value at $55 to $75 CAD per day. Cities like Oaxaca and Merida benefit from strong local food cultures where eating well and affordably largely overlap, and infrastructure in both cities is dependable for independent travel. Direct flights are available from both Toronto and Vancouver, making routing straightforward and keeping total trip costs competitive.
Quebec travellers show distinct preferences toward France, Morocco, Martinique, and Guadeloupe, with destinations offering established French-speaking communities ranking higher in Quebec booking data than nationally. Montreal-Trudeau also carries a denser direct European route network, which can translate to lower base fares on transatlantic routes for Quebec-based travellers. For bilingual families or mixed groups, this shapes the destination shortlist from the start.
Sources
- 26 Amazingly Cheap Places You Should Travel to in 2026 — indietraveller.co
- 30 Places To Travel On A Budget - We Are Global Travellers — weareglobaltravellers.com (2020)
- Cheap Vacation Packages 2026 — expedia.ca
- 10 Crazy Affordable & Underrated Places to Visit in 2026 — thewanderfulme.com (2019)
- Vacation Packages | Cheap Vacations from Canada — redtag.ca
- Last Minute Vacations | All Inclusive Flight + Resort Deals — sunwing.ca








