One of the best things about being based in Mississauga is the geography. You’re sitting at roughly the geographic centre of one of the most travel-rich regions in North America — an hour from wine country, an hour and a half from one of the world’s great natural wonders, two hours from ski hills, and within three hours of some of Ontario’s most beautiful lake and river country.
These are the road trips worth making.
Niagara Falls and Niagara-on-the-Lake (1.5 hours)
The QEW from Mississauga to Niagara Falls is one of the most straightforward drives in Ontario — no highway changes, straight shot, about 90 minutes in light traffic. Leave before 9am on summer weekends to avoid the QEW backup through Burlington.
Niagara Falls is genuinely worth seeing even if you’ve been told it’s touristy. The Canadian side’s view of Horseshoe Falls — from the Table Rock observation area right at the brink — is one of those experiences that photos simply don’t capture. The Journey Behind the Falls experience (elevator down to tunnels cut into the rock behind the falls) is worth the admission, particularly for first-timers.
Clifton Hill is cheerfully excessive — if you have children, they’ll love it; if you don’t, skip it and walk the Niagara Parkway north instead.
Niagara-on-the-Lake, 20 minutes north of the falls, is the part of the trip that locals know is actually better. A beautifully preserved Loyalist town with Queen Street lined with independent shops and excellent restaurants, surrounded by wineries that produce some of Ontario’s best VQA wines — particularly Pinot Noir, Chardonnay, and the region’s famous ice wine.
Stop at Ravine Vineyard (organic, estate wines, lovely grounds), Peller Estates (the most complete winery experience, with tours and a good restaurant), or Trius Winery for a more relaxed tasting room experience. The Shaw Festival Theatre, running April through October, is worth a ticket if you’re visiting in season.
Best route from Mississauga: QEW East to Niagara Falls, then take the Niagara Parkway north to Niagara-on-the-Lake on the way back — a scenic road along the river that’s one of the prettiest drives in southern Ontario.
Blue Mountain and Collingwood (2 hours)
Highway 400 north from Toronto, then Highway 26 west to Collingwood — the drive itself is pleasant once you clear Barrie, and the destination justifies it year-round.
Blue Mountain Village is the base area of Ontario’s most visited ski resort, but the mountain is worth visiting in summer too — the gondola runs for sightseers, the village has good restaurants and accommodation, and the surrounding Collingwood area has excellent apple orchards and cider trails.
Georgian Bay at Collingwood is the draw in summer — the bay is warmer than Lake Ontario, the beaches are sandy, and Wasaga Beach (20 minutes west of Collingwood) has the longest freshwater beach in the world if that distinction matters to you.
For food in Collingwood: Tesoro is the well-regarded fine dining option; the local craft beer scene around Side Launch Brewing and 42 North Brewing is worth exploring.
Tip: Leave Mississauga by 8am on summer Saturdays. The drive up Highway 400 gets congested quickly, and coming back Sunday afternoon can add 45-60 minutes to the trip if you leave after 5pm.
Prince Edward County (2.5 hours)
Take Highway 401 east from Mississauga to Highway 62 south into “The County” — about 2.5 hours depending on traffic through the East End of Toronto, which is the only complication.
Prince Edward County has become Ontario’s most compelling food and wine destination over the last decade. A peninsula extending into Lake Ontario with sandy beaches, family farms, a growing wine region, and a food scene that attracts chefs and restaurateurs from Toronto.
Sandbanks Provincial Park is the centrepiece — massive freshwater sand dunes dropping into turquoise water, consistently rated among the most beautiful natural areas in Ontario. Arrive early on summer weekends — the park fills to capacity by 10am in July and August, and gates close when full.
Picton is the county’s main town — a pretty main street with independent restaurants, a Saturday farmers’ market, and the County Cider Company tasting room.
Wineries worth stopping at: Norman Hardie (the county’s most celebrated producer, known for Burgundy-style Pinot Noir and Chardonnay), Closson Chase (elegant, estate-grown wines), and Hinterland Wine Company (if you want sparkling wines, this is the best in Ontario).
Muskoka Lakes (2 hours)
Highway 400 north past Barrie, then north toward Bracebridge or Gravenhurst — the drive through cottage country gets increasingly beautiful the further north you go.
Muskoka is Ontario’s cottage country in the most iconic sense — a landscape of Canadian Shield granite, pine forest, and clean lakes that has been the summer destination for Toronto and GTA families for generations. Visiting as a day tripper rather than a cottage owner gives you access to the towns and waterfront without needing a property or a host.
Gravenhurst has the Muskoka Wharf, where the RMS Segwun — a restored 1887 steamship — runs lake cruises through the summer (book in advance). The Muskoka Brewery taproom is nearby.
Bracebridge has a well-regarded downtown with independent shops and restaurants, and the Bracebridge Falls right in the town centre. In summer, the Muskoka Arts and Crafts Show runs at Annie Williams Park and draws artists from across the province.
Huntsville, further north (2.5 hours from Mississauga), is the gateway to Algonquin Provincial Park and the Arrowhead Provincial Park — both worth factoring in if you have a full day and want to push further into genuine wilderness.
Elmira and Waterloo Region (1.5 hours)
Highway 401 west, then north on 85 — one of the most underrated day trips from the GTA, particularly for food and cultural tourism.
Waterloo Region (Kitchener, Waterloo, Cambridge) has a strong craft beer and restaurant scene driven by its large university population and tech sector. The St. Jacobs Farmers’ Market, the largest year-round farmers’ market in Canada, runs Thursday and Saturday in St. Jacobs and is one of the most genuinely impressive market experiences in Ontario — a mix of Mennonite farmers, local producers, and an extraordinary range of food.
Elmira is the heart of Ontario’s Mennonite country — take Sawmill Road or Mennonite County Road 17 for a drive through farmland where horse-drawn buggies are regular traffic. The Elmira Maple Syrup Festival in April is the world’s largest single-day maple syrup festival.
For craft beer: Descendants Beer & Beverage Co. in Kitchener and Waterloo Brewing both have taprooms worth visiting.
Practical Notes for All Road Trips
The QEW, Highway 400, and Highway 401 are the three main arteries for all of these trips. Each has predictable congestion patterns — Friday afternoons and Sunday evenings are the worst times to be on any of them in summer. If you can shift departure times by even 90 minutes, the difference in drive time is significant.
Keep a Presto card loaded for any 400-series toll sections. Pack snacks for the car — the highway service centres are improving but most road food is still suboptimal compared to stopping somewhere local.
Looking for more local inspiration? Read our [Mississauga Complete Guide →] and [Day Trips from Toronto →] for more Ontario getaway ideas.
