Most of my newcomer clients land here knowing exactly two things about Winnipeg: it's cold, and the houses cost less than where they came from. Both are true. But the first month is when people either fall for the city or decide it's just a place they happen to live — and that mostly comes down to whether anyone showed them around.
So here's the tour I give. Treat it as a loose plan for your first four weeks, not a to-do list you have to grind through.
Week one: get your bearings at The Forks
Start downtown at The Forks. It sits where the Red and Assiniboine rivers meet, it's been a meeting place for about six thousand years, and it's the one spot that makes sense in every season — riverwalk and patios in summer, a long skating trail on the frozen rivers in winter. Grab lunch in the market hall, then walk five minutes to the Canadian Museum for Human Rights. You'll have orientation and a good first afternoon in one trip.
After that, don't try to "see Winnipeg." Pick one area and walk it: the Exchange District for old warehouses and coffee, Osborne Village or Corydon for shops and restaurants, St. Boniface for the French quarter. The city reveals itself one neighbourhood at a time.
Week two: eat like a local
Winnipeg punches above its weight on food, and it's the fastest way to feel at home. A few things I send people to try early:
- A Nip at Salisbury House — a local burger chain since 1931, the most Winnipeg meal there is.
- Perogies and cabbage rolls — the Ukrainian and Eastern European roots run deep here, and they're on menus all over the North End and beyond.
- Whatever cuisine you're homesick for. The Filipino, Indian, Vietnamese, Middle Eastern and Ukrainian scenes here are genuinely good.
I keep a running food and drink list on this site, sorted by type and price, so you can find your people's cooking without guessing.
Week three: plan for winter (before it arrives)
If you move in summer, winter feels like a rumour. Don't let it. The newcomers who struggle are the ones who treat -25°C as a reason to stay inside for five months. The ones who thrive get proper boots and a real parka in October and then use the city.
There's plenty to do once it's cold — skating, tobogganing, skiing and the river trail outside, and on the truly brutal days, indoor places for the kids: trampoline parks, indoor playgrounds, the children's museum, climbing gyms. Winnipeg doesn't pause for winter, and neither should you.
Week four: find your neighbourhood
By now you've seen enough of the city to have opinions, which is exactly when to start thinking about where you'd actually live. My advice is unglamorous: drive your real commute at 8 a.m., walk the area on a Saturday, and look at what's within ten minutes — groceries, schools, a park, a rec centre.
The neighbourhoods page on this site maps active listings by area and lists the surrounding towns — East St. Paul, Oak Bluff, Niverville and the rest — with how many homes are for sale in each, so you can compare at a glance. When you've narrowed it down, browse what's on the market and we'll go from there.
A quick practical list for the month, too: get a library card (it's free and the libraries are good), sign up at a City rec centre or pool, and if you'll bus, grab a Peggo transit card.
The part most guides skip
Settling somewhere new is mostly logistics, and a lot of it is real estate: how renting compares to buying here, what a fair offer looks like, the closing costs nobody warned you about. That's the part I actually do for a living — and for newcomer families I do it in English, Russian, Ukrainian or Hebrew, because the worst time to be lost in translation is when you're signing for a house.
If you've just arrived, or you're planning the move, reach out. Even if buying is a year away, an honest conversation about how it works here will save you a lot of guessing. Welcome to Winnipeg — it grows on you faster than you'd think.
