Quebec City is Canada’s most beautiful student city — a UNESCO World Heritage Site with 400 years of history, a distinct Francophone culture, and housing costs that make Montreal look expensive. Université Laval (Canada’s oldest French-language university) is the anchor, and the city’s winter-focused culture (Carnaval de Québec, ice canoe racing) is legendary.
Université Laval (Sainte-Foy)
Sainte-Foy: The neighborhood surrounding Université Laval. A proper suburban campus area — wide boulevards, shopping centres along Laurier Boulevard, and a mix of apartment buildings and multiplexes. Rooms CAD 400–700/month. Among the cheapest university-adjacent housing in Canada.
Montcalm: Between ULaval and Old Quebec. The Plains of Abraham (where the British defeated the French in 1759), the Musée national des beaux-arts, and the Grande Allée’s restaurants. 10–15 min bus. Rooms CAD 500–800/month.
Saint-Jean-Baptiste: Quebec City’s most bohemian neighborhood. Steep streets, independent bookshops on Rue Saint-Jean, and small bars with live music. 15 min bus to campus. Rooms CAD 450–750/month.
Old Quebec (Vieux-Québec)
Living in a 17th-century UNESCO World Heritage city is surreal and expensive. Mostly tourists and government workers — students typically live here only if they find a rare affordable sublet. Rooms CAD 600–900/month for the few student-friendly spots.
Limoilou
Across the Saint-Charles River, north of the centre. Working-class neighborhood rapidly becoming popular with students and artists. 3rd Avenue has vintage shops and excellent bakeries. 15–20 min bus to ULaval. Rooms CAD 400–650/month.
The French Factor
Quebec City is almost entirely French-speaking. Université Laval’s courses are taught in French. If you don’t speak French, this isn’t the right city for your studies. But for Francophone international students (from France, Belgium, Switzerland, West Africa, Haiti, etc.), Quebec City offers an authentic French-language education in North America at a fraction of the cost.
FAQ
Is Quebec City colder than Montreal? Generally yes — another 3–5°C colder on average. The winter wind off the St. Lawrence River is brutal. Prepare for -25°C regularly. What’s the student culture like? Very different from Montreal. Smaller, more intimate, more outdoorsy. The winter Carnaval is a highlight — parades, ice palaces, and the famous Bonhomme mascot. Monthly budget? CAD 1,000–1,600 — one of the best values for a major Canadian student city.