Banff National Park breaks visitation record again
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People continue to flock to Banff National Park.
It received 4.5 million visitors in fiscal year 2025–26, surpassing the previous high of 4.28 million in 2023–24, which has become a near-annual increase over the past decade. (Travel statistics are tracked from April to March each year.)
“I think one thing that will be certain is that Banff will continue to be a place where people will want to come,” Daniella Rubeling, acting superintendent of Banff National Park, said at its 26th annual planning forum.
The COVID-19 pandemic reduced visitation to three million, but it soon bounced back.
The popularity of the area has led Parks Canada, the Town of Banff and local organizations to seek short- and long-term solutions to the continued lack of visitors to Canada’s oldest national park.
Rubeling mentioned such initiatives as Three-year paid parking pilot In Upper Hot SpringsShuttles to Lewis Lake and Moraine Lake, and encourage people to take walking transit are to reduce congestion.
He said on Parks Canada’s expert panel constantly moving people More information in this area is likely to be released this year.
Banff Mayor Corey DiManno expressed concern over the timing of some of the new initiatives, Using a packed skijoring weekend earlier this year As an example of when “growing Calgary decides to show everything at the same time.”
Banff’s Snowdays kicked off over the weekend with its most popular event, with thousands of people flocking to Banff Avenue to participate in skijoring. The crowd was so large that after cars were removed and 160 illegal parking tickets were handed out, Banff officials say they will review the event to improve it next year.
Other areas are addressed
Francois Massé, superintendent of the Lake Louise, Yoho and Kootenay Area Unit, said places like Lake Louise, Moraine Lake and Banff are “iconic” and “highly sought-after” destinations.
He said Parks Canada is collecting and analyzing data from each location to create a solution.
Masse said Bow and Peyo Lakes on the Icefields Parkway and Yoho National Park’s Emerald Lake are also on his radar, but nothing is imminent.
“The pressure for visitors to very specific places is very intense,” he said. “Any local can tell you that if you want to find a quiet place, you can find it about a 15-minute drive from Lake Louise. I guarantee that if you go there with me, no one will bump into us all day.”
Impact on National Park
Peter Duck, president of Bow Valley Naturalists, said visitors to Banff may only touch a small amount of the land, but it has a cumulative effect.
“To say that three percent of things can go on in an ecosystem and be 97 percent safe is nonsense,” he said.
“You can’t create an ecosystem like this. … Three percent has a very significant impact on the ecosystem.”
Emma Hoskins, conservation operations specialist for the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society in southern Alberta, said although visitor use management plans are underway at Lake Louise and Lake Minnewanka, a more comprehensive plan could be helpful.
Massey said Parks Canada is in ongoing discussions with regional partners. He acknowledged that when schemes are brought in one area, it can have an impact on others.
“We’re considering potential spillovers and we’re talking with others. We’re trying to make it as consistent as possible,” Mace said, referring to each national park. Management Plans.
Visitation is likely to increase
Canada Strong Pass Is back offering free access to national parks for the summer months.
About 70 per cent of visitors to Banff National Park come through the area for day use, Rubeling said. As Calgary and Southern Alberta Keep growing, she said, it’s a challenge and an opportunity.
“We want people to visit the park. We want them to connect with this place, but we also want them to leave as stewards of this place.”