Friday July 17 to Sunday July 19, 2026

Three Ontario 3-day road trip options

All routes assume a Friday morning departure from Toronto and a Sunday night return. Driving times are approximate, do not include meal stops, traffic, weather, ferry loading, or time spent at attractions.

Option 1: Manitoulin Island981 km mapped route · 15h 55m moving time plus ferry logistics · best if the island is the point.
Option 2: Small-town Ontario621 km mapped route · 9h 55m moving time · best pure weekend roadtrip pace.
Option 3: East pub run627 km mapped route · 8h 24m moving time · best for friends, bars, and changing towns nightly.

Option 1: Manitoulin Island

A high-reward, higher-effort route built around the Chi-Cheemaun ferry and one full island day.

Best for scenery + ferry + island time
Map screenshot of the Manitoulin Island road trip route from Toronto to Tobermory, South Baymouth, Providence Bay, Kagawong, Little Current, and back to Toronto

Daily driving plan

DayRouteDistanceMoving time
Friday, Jul 17Toronto -> Tobermory -> ferry -> Providence Bay/Mindemoya296 km driving + 46 km ferry4h 44m driving + 1h 45m ferry, plus 1h ferry check-in
Saturday, Jul 18Providence Bay -> Kagawong -> Cup and Saucer -> Little Current -> west/central island90-150 km local loop2h-3h, depending on hikes/beach time
Sunday, Jul 19Little Current -> Espanola -> French River/Parry Sound -> Toronto500 km6h 57m before stops
Book the ferry before building the rest of the day. For peak season, the listed Tobermory departures are 08:45, 11:00, 13:15, 15:30, 17:45, and 19:45. The cleanest Friday target is 15:30 if you leave very early, or 17:45 if you want a calmer buffer.

Where to stay

  • Best base: Providence Bay or Mindemoya for beach + central-island access.
  • Convenient base: Little Current, especially if you want an easier Sunday launch toward Toronto.
  • Examples to check: The Mutchmor Lofts in Providence Bay; Manitoulin Hotel & Conference Centre or Hawberry Motel in Little Current; My Friends Inn or Wayside Motel near South Baymouth/Assiginack.

Saturday priorities

  • Cup and Saucer Trail early, before it gets hot.
  • Bridal Veil Falls and Kagawong for a low-effort scenic stop.
  • Providence Bay Beach boardwalk and sunset.
  • Little Current swing bridge / harbour if staying east.

Tradeoffs

  • Sunday is the hard day: roughly seven hours moving before stops.
  • Skip the Grotto/Flowerpot Island unless you add a night; they compete with Manitoulin time.
  • Works best with two nights on the island, not one night in Tobermory and one night on the island.

Option 2: Small-town Ontario loop

A slower Lake Huron and backroads loop through towns that feel less like a greatest-hits checklist.

Best for relaxed pace + towns + sunsets
Map screenshot of the small-town Ontario route from Toronto to St. Marys, Bayfield, Goderich, Blyth, Kincardine, Paisley, Elora, and back to Toronto

Daily driving plan

DayRouteDistanceMoving time
Friday, Jul 17Toronto -> St. Marys -> Bayfield/Goderich239 km3h 36m
Saturday, Jul 18Bayfield -> Goderich -> Blyth -> Kincardine118 km2h 05m
Sunday, Jul 19Kincardine -> Paisley -> Elora/Fergus -> Toronto263 km4h 14m
This route is the better weekend shape: shorter days, more wandering time, and less dependence on a single reservation-sensitive transportation step.

Where to stay

  • Friday: Bayfield for the prettiest village feel, or Goderich for more practical hotel inventory.
  • Saturday: Kincardine for harbour access and Lake Huron sunset.
  • Examples to check: The Little Inn of Bayfield, Goderich's official accommodation listings, Inn at the Harbour in Kincardine, or Staybridge Suites Kincardine if you want a predictable hotel setup.

Route highlights

  • St. Marys: limestone architecture, downtown, river paths, quarry swim if the timing works.
  • Bayfield: compact Main Street, lake access, slower dinner stop.
  • Goderich: town square, beach, harbour, sunset.
  • Blyth and Paisley: smaller, less polished stops that keep the route from feeling generic.
  • Elora/Fergus: a strong final meal/walk before returning to Toronto.

Tradeoffs

  • Less dramatic than Manitoulin, but more balanced.
  • Lake Huron sunset is the payoff; plan Saturday around being in Kincardine before dusk.
  • Elora can be busy, but it works well as a final Sunday stop.

Option 3: East pub run

A moving, social route with Friday in Prince Edward County and Saturday in Kingston. This is the best fit if the point is a fun roadtrip with friends, locals' pubs, and a little student-bar chaos.

Best for friends + pubs + no repeat nights
Map screenshot of the eastern pub-focused route from Toronto to Port Hope, Wellington, Picton, Kingston, Gananoque, Port Hope, and back to Toronto

Daily driving plan

DayRouteDistanceMoving time
Friday, Jul 17Toronto -> Port Hope -> Wellington -> Picton221 km3h 11m
Saturday, Jul 18Picton / PEC morning -> Kingston83 km1h 10m plus local County wandering
Sunday, Jul 19Kingston -> Gananoque -> Toronto, with Port Hope if timing works323 km4h 03m
The structure is deliberate: PEC on Friday for breweries/patios, Kingston on Saturday for the livelier night, and a scenic Sunday return through Gananoque and Port Hope.

Where to stay

  • Friday: Picton if you want walkable bars and easier lodging; Wellington if you want lake/brewery energy.
  • Saturday: Downtown Kingston, close enough to walk between pubs and leave the car parked.
  • Booking bias: choose location over polish. This route is about being able to wander, not hiding at a resort.

Vibe stops

  • Port Hope: lunch/pint stop, good historic downtown pub feel.
  • Wellington/Picton: breweries, patios, vacation-town energy without committing the whole weekend to PEC.
  • Kingston: Queen's-adjacent bars, old pubs, live music, and late-night bad decisions.
  • Gananoque: short scenic Sunday detour before turning west.

Tradeoffs

  • Less nature-drama than Manitoulin, but much better for a social weekend.
  • PEC can be expensive and booked up in July; Picton is the practical first search.
  • If Sunday feels long, skip Gananoque and go Kingston -> Port Hope -> Toronto.