Restaurant in Quebec City, Canada
Auberge Saint-Antoine
1,050Pearl PointsBook it for history, stay for the food.

About Auberge Saint-Antoine
A two-Michelin-key Relais & Châteaux property built on one of Quebec City's richest archaeological sites, Auberge Saint-Antoine combines 95 rooms across three historic buildings with farm-to-table dining at Chez Muffy and a genuinely atmospheric bar. At $476 per night and with a 4.8 Google rating, it is the most credentialed hotel in Old Quebec — book 4 to 6 weeks ahead minimum.
Should You Book Auberge Saint-Antoine?
If you are weighing Auberge Saint-Antoine against a conventional Old Quebec hotel, the comparison collapses quickly in its favour. Most luxury properties in this city offer a pleasant room and a heritage address. Auberge Saint-Antoine offers 95 rooms spread across three centuries-old buildings on one of Quebec City's richest archaeological sites, a two-Michelin-key designation, Relais & Châteaux membership, and a 90-point La Liste Leading Hotels (2026) rating — credentials no other property in this neighbourhood can match. Starting from $476 per night, it is priced accordingly, but the value equation holds if you want a hotel that doubles as a living collection of Quebec history.
The Property
What you see when you arrive sets the tone immediately. The reception desk is built from two-century-old oak planks. Artifacts recovered from on-site archaeological digs are displayed throughout the guest rooms and common areas — pieces dating as far back as the 1600s. The hotel occupies the footprint of a former cannon battery and maritime warehouse at the lower end of Old Port, steps from the Petit-Champlain district, overlooking the St. Lawrence River. The visual layering is deliberate: stone walls and exposed wood ceilings in Chez Muffy (the main dining room, housed in a preserved 19th-century riverside warehouse) sit alongside chic, colourful furniture. In the Hunt House wing, wood panelling from 1760 is paired with contemporary lifestyle accessories. The effect is less museum-reverent and more confidently curated.
Winter is arguably the leading time to experience the property fully. Heated wood floors made from Quebec wood, fireplaces in select rooms and the Artefact Bar's intimate alcoves, and the private cinema room for families staying in historically themed suites all make more sense when the cobblestone streets outside are under snow. Summer has its appeal , river-view balconies and proximity to the Petit-Champlain pedestrian district , but the hotel's character comes through most clearly in the colder months, when the warmth of the interior reads as genuinely earned rather than decorative.
Dining: Chez Muffy and Artefact Bar
The Artefact Bar is where the hotel's museum identity and its hospitality instincts converge most directly. Cocktails are served among relics from the site's history, with two fireplace alcoves designed for privacy. Live music runs every Thursday and Saturday , if you want a quiet conversation, arrive early or skip those nights. For a more substantial meal, Chez Muffy's farm-to-table Canadian menu sources vegetables and fruit from the hotel's own organic farm on Île d'Orléans during the growing season, a supply chain that gives the kitchen genuine seasonal range. Chef Sam Mason leads the kitchen. The dining room itself , stone walls, exposed beams, coloured upholstery , is one of the more characterful settings for a serious meal in Quebec City.
The bar counter and Artefact seating are worth noting for solo travellers and couples who want the atmosphere without a full dining commitment. Sitting at the bar positions you close to the artefact displays, which give you something to look at and ask about , it functions as a natural conversation starter with staff who are described as having extensive knowledge of the hotel's archaeological history and the surrounding neighbourhoods. The bilingual concierge team is a practical asset here: for first-time visitors to Quebec City, having staff who can navigate both languages and know the city's historical quarters in depth makes a material difference to how much you get out of a short stay.
Practical Details
Rooms: 95 rooms and suites across three historical buildings, ranging from contemporary main-wing rooms to period-designed Hunt House suites with wood panelling from 1760. Most feature heated floors, Frette linens, Bose sound systems, Nespresso machines, and no-fog mirrors. Select rooms include fireplaces or balconies with river views. Budget: From $476 per night. Getting There: Located 19 km from Quebec City Jean Lesage Airport; transfers available for CAD 60 plus taxes and gratuity one way in a sedan. Parking: Street parking is difficult on the narrow cobblestone roads, which are often pedestrianised in summer. Valet parking is the practical choice , the underground heated deck includes EV charging stations. Pets: Welcome in preselected rooms. Families: The private cinema, Cinema Saint-Antoine, is available free to families staying in historically themed guest rooms. Reservations: Book well ahead; this is a high-demand Relais & Châteaux property in a UNESCO World Heritage site during both summer and winter peak seasons. Contact via email at antoine@relaischateaux.com or by phone at +1 418-692-2211.
How It Sits in Quebec City's Wider Scene
Auberge Saint-Antoine is the anchor property for anyone building a serious Quebec City itinerary around food and history. For dining beyond the hotel, Tanière³ is the city's most ambitious creative tasting menu and worth booking on the same trip. ARVI offers a different register of modern Quebec cuisine at a comparable price point. If you want to explore the broader food scene, see our full Quebec City restaurants guide, our full Quebec City hotels guide, our full Quebec City bars guide, and our full Quebec City experiences guide. For Canadian fine dining context further afield, Alo in Toronto, Jérôme Ferrer - Europea in Montreal, and Eden at The Rimrock Resort in Banff operate in a comparable tier of Canadian hospitality. AnnaLena in Vancouver and Restaurant Pearl Morissette in Lincoln are useful points of reference for farm-driven Canadian cuisine at the serious end of the market.
Frequently Asked Questions
How far ahead should I book Auberge Saint-Antoine?
Book at least 6 to 8 weeks out for peak summer and winter Carnival season — the 95-room property fills fast given its Relais & Châteaux status and position steps from the Petit-Champlain district. Shoulder season (April or November) gives you more flexibility, but the Hunt House suites go first regardless of timing. Airport transfers can be pre-arranged for CAD 60 plus taxes, so factor that in when booking.
Is Auberge Saint-Antoine good for solo dining?
Yes, especially at Artefact Bar, where the counter setup and live music on Thursdays and Saturdays make it easy to sit alone without the dining-room formality of Chez Muffy. The bar's artifact-filled setting gives you something to absorb between drinks. Solo travellers who want a full dinner should note that Chez Muffy, set inside a 19th-century warehouse, suits pairs or small groups better for atmosphere.
What should I wear to Auberge Saint-Antoine?
Chez Muffy calls for neat, presentable dress — think business casual at minimum given its Michelin 2-key Relais & Châteaux positioning. Artefact Bar is more relaxed: the cocktail-and-casual-food format means you can arrive straight from a day in the Old Port without changing. The hotel does not publish a formal dress code, so when in doubt, dress up slightly rather than down.
What are alternatives to Auberge Saint-Antoine in Quebec City?
For dining, Tanière³ is the choice if tasting-menu-driven modern Quebec cuisine is the priority over accommodation. ARVI and Chez Boulay - Bistro Boréal are strong options for a la carte meals that lean into local ingredients without the hotel context. If the museum-hotel format specifically appeals to you, there is no direct comparable in Quebec City at this credential level — the Michelin 2-key and Relais & Châteaux combination is singular here.
Is Auberge Saint-Antoine good for a special occasion?
It is one of the most practical choices in Quebec City for a milestone stay — two Michelin keys, 4.8/5 guest rating, fireplace alcoves at Artefact Bar, and rooms with river views or private terraces make the occasion framework easy to execute. Chez Muffy's farm-to-fork menu, sourced in season from the hotel's own Île d'Orléans organic farm, adds a dinner component that matches the room investment. Couples and anniversaries are the obvious fit; families with film interests should ask about the private Cinema Saint-Antoine screening room.
What should I order at Auberge Saint-Antoine?
The menu at Chez Muffy is shaped by Canadian farm-to-table sourcing with produce drawn from the hotel's own organic farm on Île d'Orléans when in season. Specific dishes are not published in the available record, so check current menus directly with the hotel at antoine@relaischateaux.com or +1 418-692-2211. At Artefact Bar, the cocktail list is the anchor — the bar's identity is built around its drinks program and its artifact-filled setting rather than its food.
Does Auberge Saint-Antoine handle dietary restrictions?
A farm-to-table kitchen like Chez Muffy, operating at Relais & Châteaux standards with a 4.8/5 guest score, typically handles dietary requirements with more flexibility than a volume restaurant — but specific accommodation policies are not documented in the available data. check the venue's official channels before arrival: antoine@relaischateaux.com or +1 418-692-2211. Flag requirements at booking rather than on the night for best results at this level of property.
Location
8 Rue Saint-Antoine, Québec, QC G1K 3Z9, Canada
Quebec City, Canada
Also Consider
- Tanière³, Creative, $$$$
- ARVI, Modern Cuisine, $$$$
- Chez Boulay - Bistro Boréal, Modern Cuisine, $$
- Ambre Buvette, Modern Cuisine, $$$
- Battuto, Italian, $$
Auberge Saint-Antoine operates in a different category from most Quebec City dining options. As a two-Michelin-key hotel with its own Chez Muffy restaurant and Artefact Bar, it is a full hospitality destination rather than a standalone restaurant. If your priority is the meal itself rather than the overnight stay, Tanière³ (Creative, $$$$) is the more focused choice, it is Quebec City's most ambitious creative tasting menu and the right booking if you want a single defining dining experience. ARVI (Modern Cuisine, $$$$) sits at a comparable price point and offers modern Quebec cooking with its own distinct identity, without the hotel overhead.
For something more accessible on price, Chez Boulay - Bistro Boréal (Modern Cuisine, $$) and Battuto (Italian, $$) both deliver strong cooking at a fraction of the spend. If you are planning multiple meals during a stay in Old Quebec, these are practical additions to the itinerary alongside a dinner at Chez Muffy. Ambre Buvette (Modern Cuisine, $$$) splits the difference, a mid-tier spend with a wine-bar format that suits casual evenings.
The clearest recommendation: if you are booking a multi-night stay in Quebec City and history, atmosphere, and a credentialed dining room matter to you, Auberge Saint-Antoine is the anchor. Add Tanière³ for a creative tasting menu dinner and Chez Boulay for a casual lunch, and you have a complete itinerary. If budget is the primary constraint, skip the hotel and book ARVI for your one serious meal, then use Battuto or Chez Boulay for the rest.
Recognized By
Explore Quebec City
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