Twelve hot tub hotels across Quebec, from Gatineau budget stays to Eastern Townships luxury. Auberge Le Tricorne in North Hatley leads at 4.8, a quiet lakeside inn from $140 CAD. Best value starts at $66 at La Paysanne in Sherbrooke.
Quebec's jacuzzi hotels spread from Gatineau on the Ottawa border to the Eastern Townships lakeside villages, but the quality clusters around one lake. Three of the twelve properties sit on or near Lake Massawippi in North Hatley. Manoir Hovey pairs a freestanding tub with Michelin-recognized dining. Le Cachet B&B earns a 4.7 rating on romantic atmosphere alone. Gatineau carries the volume and the budget range. You can book an in-room whirlpool from $90 CAD at Adam Motel or step up to Hilton Lac Leamy at $228. Hôtel Quintessence in Mont-Tremblant rounds out the luxury end with a clawfoot tub, lake views, and ski-village quiet that suits a mid-week winter reset. Prices across the province run $66 to $374 CAD.
12 hotelsFrom CA$66 – CA$374/nightBest rating 4.8
12 properties
Hilton Lac Leamy
Gatineau, Quebec
Excellent6,951 reviews
4.5
Hilton Lac-Leamy in Gatineau with a freestanding spa tub, restaurant, indoor pool, and beautiful architecture. The outdoor pool and the casino across the river from Ottawa.
Near L'Estriade cycling trail and Granby Zoo, this full-service spa hotel has a Jacuzzi suite, restaurant, massage service, and both indoor and outdoor pools.
Montreal has 32 jacuzzi hotels from Old Montreal to the Laurentians. The highest-rated option is Boxotel in Mile End, a 4.7-rated loft with a freestanding tub from CAD $188.
This collection covers 1,015 Choice Hotels with in-room tubs across the US, Canada, and the UK. The highest-rated is Stonecroft Country Inn near Mystic, Connecticut at 4.9. Budget picks start at $63 in metro Detroit.
Six hundred ninety-five owner-run hotels with private jacuzzi tubs. The highest rated is Spectacular Vista in the Smokies at 5.0 and $188 a night. Best value is Blue60 Marigny Inn in New Orleans at $136.
695 properties
Frequently Asked Questions
The answer depends on what you want around the tub. Montreal puts you in a city. The Vogue Hotel is steps from Rue Sainte-Catherine, so you soak and then go out. The Eastern Townships are the opposite. Manoir Hovey in North Hatley sits on a lake with nothing but quiet. Montreal is a weekend trip with a tub bonus. The Townships are a retreat where the tub is the point.
Season shapes everything in Quebec. In winter, the province drops well below freezing. Stepping into a hot tub after a day on the slopes at Mont-Tremblant feels different from in July. Hôtel Quintessence books out fast in ski season for exactly this reason. Summer shifts the draw. You are less focused on the tub and more on the lake or the patio. Book winter if the tub is the main event. Book summer if it is a nice-to-have.
The setup varies. At Le Cachet B&B in North Hatley, you get a jetted tub inside your suite with a door that locks. That is genuinely private. At highway motels like La Paysanne, the whirlpool is in the bathroom, which is private but feels closer to a nice bathtub than a romantic suite. Check whether the tub is in-room or in-bathroom before you book. That one detail changes the whole experience.
The Townships cluster around Lake Massawippi, and that lake drives the whole experience. Ripplecove Hotel & Spa in Ayer's Cliff sits right on the water. After your soak, Pilsen Pub in North Hatley is a short drive and pours local beer. The area is wine country too. Route des Vins runs through the region. You do not need an itinerary here. The pace is slow by design.
Outside Montreal, almost everything is an inn or B&B. Auberge Le Tricorne in Hatley is a country inn with five rooms. Ripplecove calls itself a hotel but feels like a lakeside lodge. Montreal is where you find full-service properties like the Omni Mont-Royal with a concierge and lobby bar. If you want someone to remember your name at breakfast, book the Townships. If you want anonymity, book Montreal.