- Of all the winter train rides of the world, the Japan Railways Group named the Canadian Rockies Snow Train the best.
- The train sets off from Vancouver and travels overnight to Jasper, where it terminates.
- Many people journey deeper into the Rockies on an overland tour of Lake Louise and Banff, ending in Calgary.
Japan is world-renowned for its bullet trains, which transport passengers at speeds of up to 200 miles per hour. For that reason, when the Japan Railways Group ran a study reviewing popular winter train routes around the world, we took notice.
The study, released in 2024 by the experts at JR Pass, a rail pass sold by the Japan Railways Group for overseas visitors, analyzed things like Tripadvisor reviews, Instagram hashtags, and snowfall data to determine the world’s most enchanting train rides. At the very top of their rankings was the Canadian Rockies Snow Train.
The route alone is wish-list-worthy. The train departs from Vancouver and heads east toward the Rockies, a mountain range known for its rugged, ice-capped peaks and glacier-fed lakes. Along the way, the train passes through dense forests and narrow river canyons. After one night on the train, you arrive in Jasper, a mountain town set within a national park of the same name. Jasper National Park is home to the shrinking Athabasca Glacier, which can be easily visited, along with beautiful (likely frozen) alpine lakes. The park also happens to be the world’s second-largest International Dark Sky Preserve.
The route ends in Jasper, but most tour companies continue the journey by coach on the Icefields Parkway, one of the most beautiful winter drives in the world. The parkway connects Jasper with Lake Louise and Banff, two sibling towns set within Banff National Park, Canada’s oldest and most storied national park. In addition to visiting the turquoise, glacier-fed Lake Louise, which is surrounded by high peaks, you can hike the Johnston Canyon Icewalk or enjoy the light show from the Banff Gondola. From Banff, the trip continues to Calgary, where most travelers end their journey.
In its ranking, JRPass gave the train a score of 8.94 out of 10, calling the route an “unrivaled showcase of Canada’s majestic winter landscapes.” Over the season, much of the region sees well over 100 inches of average annual snowfall, a key component to the magic of a winter train ride. The journey includes a night in a private sleeper car, all meals, and access to the train’s viewing areas, which have oversized windows.
Ranked under the Canadian Rockies Snow Train were nine other routes spread across the globe—three in Japan, five in Europe, and one in the United States. Rounding out the top five are Japan’s Stove Train, Colorado’s Pikes Peak Cog Railway, France’s Montenvers Train, and Norway’s Bergen Line.


