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The Wandering Fam Michigan Family · On Points
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Banff National Park with kids — The Wandering Fam

Banff
with Kids

The Canadian Rockies — our favorite national park trip ever

Duration 6–10 Days
Best Time Jul–Sep
We Paid $3,710
Kid Rating ⭐ 5/5
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Why Banff?

Banff — or more broadly, the Canadian Rockies — might just be our favorite National Park trip ever. Imagine waking up each day to a panorama pulled straight from a dream: the winding Icefields Parkway, turquoise lakes like Emerald, Peyto, and Bow Lake shimmering under a vast sky, jagged peaks standing like nature’s guardians.

“Every moment here feels like a gift — a reminder of just how beautiful and majestic our world can be.”

Traveling with kids, we kept our pace slow and steady — skipping crowded spots like Lake Louise and Moraine Lake in favor of quieter, equally stunning places. We weren’t just visiting Banff; we were living it, one peaceful day at a time.

Heads up on Jasper: Our original plan included two nights in Jasper, but wildfires forced us to pivot to Kananaskis. It turned out to be a hidden gem — equally beautiful and far less crowded.

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6-Day Itinerary

📍 Banff National Park & Yoho

Day 0 Arrival in Calgary

Flew into Calgary, checked into the Hyatt Place near the airport (8K points — great value). Loved how smooth YYC security was — passport scan machines, print receipt, done.

Calgary (YYC) Hyatt Place 🏨 Easy airport security ✅
Day 1 Drive to Banff + Tunnel Mountain Hike

Scenic drive to Banff with a Safeway stop in Canmore for supplies. Room not ready on arrival, so we tackled Tunnel Mountain Hike — 3 miles, great views of Banff town and the river. Grabbed bear spray first — a must in bear country!

Safeway Canmore 🛒 Bear Spray 🐻 Tunnel Mountain Trail Banff Town Views
Day 2 Icefields Parkway ⭐

One of the most breathtaking drives in the world. Left early at 8:30 AM with the Guide Along app running — a total game-changer for the whole drive. Highlight: Columbia Icefields Tour on the Ice Explorers, walking on Athabasca Glacier.

Guide Along App 📱 Athabasca Glacier 🧊 Peyto Lake Bow Lake Mistaya Canyon
Day 3 Banff Gondola + Yoho National Park

Banff Gondola was way cooler than expected — private gondola for the family, stunning summit views, short hike at the top. Korean lunch at Hankki (get the fried chicken rice bowl!). Then Yoho: Spiral Tunnels (train passed through!), canoeing on Emerald Lake (mesmerizing turquoise water), and Takakkaw Falls — 2nd tallest in Canada. Ended with a swim at the hotel pool.

Banff Gondola 🚠 Sky Bistro (reserve ahead!) Hankki Korean Lunch 🍱 Spiral Tunnels 🚂 Emerald Lake Canoe 🛶 Takakkaw Falls

📍 Kananaskis Country

Day 4 Lake Minnewanka + Arrival in Kananaskis

Scenic Lake Minnewanka loop — spotted mountain goats! Then drove to Kananaskis Mountain Lodge (48K Marriott points/night — incredible value). Village Rim Trail hike in the afternoon. Kids loved the lodge waterpark in the evening.

Lake Minnewanka Loop Mountain Goats 🐐 Kananaskis Lodge Village Rim Trail Waterpark 💦
Day 5 Upper Kananaskis Lake + Troll Falls

Clouds draped over the mountains made the drive surreal. Blackshale Suspension Bridge (Raynuv tried to shake it to scare Mom 😂). Hiked around Upper Kananaskis Lake. Coal oven pizza at Forte Restaurant — kids eat free under 6! Afternoon Troll Falls hike. Dad snuck in the Nordic spa while the kids hit the waterpark.

Blackshale Bridge Upper Kananaskis Lake Forte Restaurant 🍕 Troll Falls Trail Nordic Spa ♨️
Day 6 Bike Ride + Bear Encounter ⭐

Rented bikes and hit the Bill Milne Trail. Within minutes — mama bear and two cubs on the trail. We backed up, bear spray ready, and watched the cubs try to climb a tree (and adorably fail). Once they moved on, we rode 5 miles of breathtaking trail. Best day of the whole trip. Then a last-minute dash to Calgary airport — barely made it with a 15-min flight delay saving us!

Bill Milne Trail 🚴 Mama Bear + Cubs 🐻 5-Mile Ride Airport Sprint ✈️
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Where We Stayed

Book early. Banff and Canmore are wildly popular. Best spots get snatched up months in advance and prices spike dramatically close to your dates.

📍 Banff

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Moxy Hotel (Marriott) – Banff

Newly opened — the only way to use points in central Banff. Fun vibe, great lobby with games, ice hockey machine, pool and hot tub. We used 3 Free Night Marriott certs for 3 nights.

✓ 3 Free Night Marriott certs
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Fairmont Banff Springs

The ultimate splurge — like staying in a castle. Worth it if you can swing it. There’s also a Fairmont on Lake Louise for double the luxury.

★ Ultimate Splurge
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Juniper / Peaks / Moose Hotel – Banff

Great stays at relatively reasonable Banff prices. Good options if you want to be in town without the Fairmont price tag.

✓ Mid-Range

📍 Canmore (Save $$)

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Blackstone Mountain Lodge / Falcon Crest

Both by Clique Hotels. Beautiful settings, slightly more affordable than Banff. Short drive to the park — great value choice.

✓ Best Value
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Malcolm Hotel – Canmore

Combines comfort and style beautifully. Another solid Canmore option that won’t destroy your budget.

✓ Stylish Pick

📍 Kananaskis

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Kananaskis Mountain Lodge

Massive, stunning property. Waterpark, Nordic spa, great restaurants, hiking trails from the lodge. We used 2 Free Night Marriott certs for 2 nights — incredible value.

✓ 2 Free Night Marriott certs

📍 Calgary (Airport)

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Hyatt Place – Calgary Airport

Solid airport hotel for arrival and departure nights. Spacious rooms, great breakfast. We used 8K Hyatt points on arrival and 9.5K on departure — fantastic redemption value.

✓ 8K + 9.5K Hyatt points
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Getting There

Fly into Calgary International (YYC) — about 1.5 hours from Banff. We split our flights across two strategies: one-way on 50K Delta points booking WestJet (a great transfer if you have Amex points going to Delta), and the return on cash — partially offset by our Capital One Venture X $147 travel credit, bringing the net outbound cost to just $22. Once Jasper fully reopens, consider flying into Edmonton (YEG) for a Banff → Jasper loop and flying home from the other airport.

YYC airport security is remarkably smooth — passport scan machines, print the receipt, show it on the way out. Genuinely impressive.

🚗 The Autoslash Car Rental Trick

💰 Our initial car rental quote for Banff was $900. We booked it, entered the reservation into Autoslash, and let it monitor for price drops. By the time we travelled the final price was $463. Same car, same dates, $437 saved. This is the single best car rental trick we know.

Renting a car is essential. The Icefields Parkway alone is worth it — pull over whenever the scenery takes your breath away. Shuttles exist but are limiting with kids. Full strategy in our Car Rental Guide →

Lake Louise & Moraine Lake: No private parking at Moraine Lake — Parks Canada shuttle required (book way in advance). Lake Louise has limited parking. Plan ahead or skip on busy summer days.

📱 Airalo eSIM — essential for Canada. Instead of paying roaming charges, we used Airalo for a Canadian data eSIM. About $18, instant setup before you leave home, works the moment you land at YYC. We now use it on every international trip.

Flight booking tips in our Flights Guide →

Points cards we used for this trip Delta, Marriott & Hyatt

Our Cards →
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What It Cost Us

Banff isn’t cheap — especially in summer when hotel prices are brutal. Points made the biggest difference on lodging, where cash rates were eye-watering. Here’s the full breakdown.

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Flights — $594 out of pocket

Outbound: $22 net (50K Delta points on WestJet, Capital One X $147 credit applied). Return: $572 cash. Plus $104 airport parking.

Saved $810 with points & credits
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Hotels — $145 out of pocket

Hyatt Calgary arrival: 8K points, $0 (value $138). Moxy Banff: 3 Free Night Marriott certs, $75 fees (value $1,646). Kananaskis: 2 Free Night certs, $70 fees (value $1,021). Hyatt Calgary departure: 9.5K points, $0 (value $181).

Saved $2,841 with points & certs
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Transport — $745 out of pocket

Car rental: $463 (down from $900 using Autoslash — saved $437). Gas: $200. Banff-Yoho park pass: $49. Kananaskis pass: $33.

✓ Autoslash saved $437
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Activities — $515 out of pocket

Banff Gondola: $103. Icefield Adventure + Skywalk: $214. Canoe rental Emerald Lake: $74. Bike rental Kananaskis: $124.

✓ Worth every dollar
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Food & Misc — $1,605 out of pocket

Restaurants: $800. Groceries (Safeway Canmore): $350. Airalo eSIM Canada: $18. Guide Along app: $37. Tips etc: $400.

✓ $18 Airalo vs $100+ roaming
We Paid
$3,710
Trip Was Worth
$7,621
Saved $3,912 with points, certs & credits

💡 Our Top Banff Tips

📱 Download Guide Along. Get the Icefields Parkway Tour before you drive it. It tells you exactly where to stop, what to look for, and the best photo spots. Total game-changer.
🐻 Buy bear spray in Banff. Pick it up at the Banff Convenience Store before any trail. Non-negotiable — we encountered a mama bear and two cubs on our bike ride.
🛒 Stock up at Safeway in Canmore. Groceries and snacks are much cheaper than inside the park. Do a big shop on arrival day.
🚗 Use Autoslash for your car rental. Book early, enter your reservation into Autoslash, and let it monitor for price drops. We went from $900 to $463 — same car, same dates. Always use it for Canada.
📱 Get an Airalo eSIM for Canada. About $18 for a Canadian data plan — activate before you leave home, works the moment you land at YYC. Way cheaper than roaming. We now use it on every international trip.
🚡 Book the Gondola and Sky Bistro early. Private gondola for your family is a highlight. Sky Bistro fills up — book reservations before the trip.
👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 Skip crowded spots with young kids. We skipped Lake Louise and Moraine Lake — no shuttles with toddlers. Found quieter, equally stunning alternatives and enjoyed them more.
✈️ Give yourself 3 hours at YYC on departure. Canadian security + US immigration at the airport = long lines. We almost missed our flight with 2.5 hours. Silver lining: no US customs on arrival home.
🌊 Don’t skip Kananaskis. Far less crowded than Banff, equally stunning, and the lodge is exceptional. It was our unexpected highlight of the whole trip.

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