YYJ, YCD, YQQ, float planes, and everything island residents need to know about air travel
Vancouver Island has three commercial airports and a thriving float plane network. Understanding your air travel options before you move can save you thousands of dollars a year — and a lot of frustration.
One of the most common surprises for people who move to Vancouver Island is how quickly air travel becomes routine. On the mainland, flying somewhere was an event — you'd plan it weeks ahead. On the island, many residents fly to Vancouver the way Torontonians take the GO Train. It's just how you get to the mainland when you don't want to spend 4+ hours on BC Ferries.
The good news: Vancouver Island is genuinely well-served by air. Three commercial airports — Victoria (YYJ), Nanaimo (YCD), and Comox Valley (YQQ) — handle scheduled jet service. A network of float plane and small aircraft operators connects downtown harbours directly to downtown Vancouver, the Gulf Islands, and remote communities. And Victoria International has enough international routes that you can sometimes skip YVR entirely.
The less good news: it's not cheap. A short hop to Vancouver can cost $150–$350 per person each way. If you're flying off-island regularly — for work, family visits, or specialist medical appointments — those costs add up fast. Islanders learn to be strategic about when they fly, when they ferry, and when they just... don't go.
This guide covers every airport on Vancouver Island, the airlines that serve them, real costs you'll actually pay, float plane options, and honest advice for making air travel work as an island resident. Whether you're retiring to the island or working remotely, understanding the flight landscape is essential to planning your budget and your lifestyle.
The closest thing Vancouver Island has to a major airport. If you're living anywhere from Victoria to Duncan, YYJ is your home base.
YYJ sits in Sidney, on the Saanich Peninsula, about 25 kilometres north of downtown Victoria. If you live in the capital region — Victoria, Saanich, Oak Bay, Sidney, or the West Shore — this is your airport. It's also the most practical option for anyone living in the Cowichan Valley south of Duncan.
The airport is right off Highway 17 (the Pat Bay Highway), and during non-rush hours you can get there from downtown Victoria in about 25 minutes. During morning or evening rush, budget 35–45 minutes. There's no rail link — you're either driving, getting dropped off, taking a taxi/rideshare, or using the limited BC Transit connections (Route 88 from McTavish Exchange).
The bread-and-butter route at YYJ is Victoria to Vancouver. Air Canada operates this like a shuttle service — multiple flights per day, often hourly during peak times. The flight is just 25 minutes gate to gate, but once you factor in security, boarding, and the walk to your gate at YVR, the total door-to-door time is 2.5–3 hours. Compare that to 3.5–4 hours by ferry (including driving to and from terminals).
Where it matters most: if you're foot-passenger only (no car), the flight is almost always faster. If you need your vehicle on the mainland, the ferry wins — unless you're willing to rent a car on the other side.
Parking fills up over long weekends and during summer peak. If you're leaving your car for a week-plus trip, book economy online in advance.
Let's be honest: YYJ is a small regional airport. That's mostly a feature, not a bug. Security lines rarely exceed 15 minutes. You can arrive 75 minutes before a domestic flight and feel comfortable. The terminal has a decent selection of food options (including a White Spot — very BC) and free Wi-Fi. There's no lounge access for most credit cards, though the Plaza Premium lounge accepts Priority Pass.
The terminal was expanded and renovated in recent years, so it doesn't feel dated. But if you're used to the amenities of a major hub, adjust your expectations. This is an airport that serves 2 million passengers a year, not 20 million.
Smaller, simpler, and significantly less busy than YYJ. If you live in Nanaimo, Parksville-Qualicum, or Port Alberni, YCD saves you the drive south.
YCD is located in Cassidy, about 15 kilometres south of downtown Nanaimo along the Trans-Canada Highway. It's a small, no-fuss airport that processes passengers quickly — you can literally walk from your car to the gate in 10 minutes. For residents of Nanaimo, Ladysmith, or the Parksville-Qualicum corridor, YCD is significantly more convenient than driving 90+ minutes to YYJ.
YCD is primarily a Vancouver connector. Almost everything else requires connecting through YVR. There are no direct flights to Calgary, Edmonton, or Toronto from Nanaimo — you'll always be routing via Vancouver.
Nanaimo residents have more options than anyone else on the island. Beyond flying from YCD, you can take the BC Ferries Departure Bay to Horseshoe Bay route (1 hour 40 minutes), the Duke Point to Tsawwassen route (2 hours), or the Hullo passenger ferry from downtown Nanaimo harbour to downtown Vancouver (1 hour 10 minutes).
The Hullo fast ferry has genuinely changed the calculus for central island residents. At $40–$55 each way (foot passenger), it's cheaper than flying, faster than BC Ferries, and drops you in downtown Vancouver — not the airport. For many Nanaimo residents, the Hullo has replaced short-hop flights entirely for mainland day trips.
For details on ferry options, see our complete ferries and transportation guide.
Parking at YCD is cheap and plentiful: $8/day for long-term, $48/week. The terminal is bare-bones but functional — a small waiting area, basic vending, and that's about it. Don't expect restaurants or lounges. This is a get-in-get-out airport, and honestly, that's fine.
If you live in Nanaimo and need to fly somewhere beyond Vancouver, crunch the numbers. A YCD→YVR→destination ticket is sometimes more expensive than driving 1.5 hours to YYJ and flying direct. But factor in gas, parking ($13/day at YYJ vs. $8 at YCD), your time, and the fatigue of a long drive before an early flight. There's no universal right answer — it depends on the trip.
A surprisingly capable little airport that punches above its weight. If you're in the Comox Valley, Campbell River, or anywhere north of Qualicum, YQQ is your lifeline.
YQQ shares its runway with CFB Comox (Canadian Forces Base Comox), which is actually a significant advantage — the military keeps the runway in excellent condition, and it's long enough to handle any commercial aircraft. The airport is located on the Comox Peninsula, about 10 minutes from downtown Comox and 15 minutes from Courtenay.
For Campbell River residents, YQQ is about a 45-minute drive south — far more practical than the 3-hour trek to YYJ. Even residents of Parksville and Qualicum Beach sometimes prefer YQQ to YCD, depending on where they're headed.
If you're considering moving to the Comox Valley, the airport is a genuine selling point. The direct WestJet service to Calgary gives you access to the entire WestJet network without touching YVR. For people with family in Alberta — and there are a lot of Alberta transplants in the Comox Valley — this route is a lifeline.
The seasonal sun destination charters are also a bigger deal than you might think. When you're living through a grey November on the island, being able to fly direct to Puerto Vallarta from your local airport (instead of driving 3 hours to YVR first) is genuinely quality-of-life changing. See our guide to Vancouver Island weather by season to understand why winter sun trips matter.
The terminal is small but was renovated in 2019 and is perfectly pleasant. There's a small café, free Wi-Fi, and security is almost never a problem — expect 5–10 minutes at most. The airport authority has been investing in expansion, and passenger numbers have been growing steadily.
The military presence at CFB Comox means you'll occasionally see search and rescue helicopters and military aircraft alongside commercial planes. It's normal and adds character. The base also provides economic stability to the Comox Valley — military families are a significant part of the community fabric. Learn more in our Comox Valley guide.
Nothing says "I live on Vancouver Island" quite like hopping on a float plane from the harbour. It's not just scenic — for many routes, it's the fastest way to the mainland.
Float planes are genuinely woven into Vancouver Island life in a way that surprises newcomers. These aren't tourist gimmicks — they're practical transportation that thousands of islanders use regularly. A float plane from Victoria's Inner Harbour to downtown Vancouver takes 35 minutes and drops you at the Coal Harbour seaplane terminal, steps from the financial district. Try doing that by any other means.
The tradeoff: they're small aircraft (most seat 6–19 passengers), they're weather-dependent (fog and high winds cause cancellations), and they carry very limited luggage. But for a foot-passenger commute to Vancouver, they're genuinely unbeatable.
The dominant player and Canada's largest seaplane airline. Harbour Air operates scheduled service from multiple Vancouver Island locations to downtown Vancouver (Coal Harbour), YVR South Terminal, and various Gulf Islands destinations.
Pricing: Victoria–Vancouver one way: $145–$210 depending on time of day and demand (dynamic pricing). Book early for best rates. Multi-pass and commuter books available — see the Frequent Flyer section below.
Harbour Air is also notable for its commitment to electric aviation — they've been testing the world's first commercial electric seaplane (the eBeaver) and plan to begin electric service on short routes. It's a legitimate innovation story happening right here on the island.
Based in Seattle, Kenmore operates seasonal float plane service between Victoria and Seattle. This is primarily a tourist route, but it's useful for islanders heading to the Pacific Northwest. Service typically runs May through September.
Operates from the YVR South Terminal (not downtown Vancouver). Seair connects YVR to several Gulf Islands and Nanaimo Harbour. Their sweet spot is connecting island residents to YVR for outbound flights — land at the South Terminal and shuttle to the main YVR terminals.
Several smaller operators serve niche routes and charter services:
Float planes are amazing when they work. The downtown-to-downtown convenience is real, the views are spectacular, and the time savings can be significant. But you need to go in with realistic expectations:
A complete rundown of every airline operating scheduled service to and from Vancouver Island's airports.
Air Canada is the dominant carrier on Vancouver Island, operating the most flights from all three airports. Their Express service (operated by Jazz Aviation using Dash 8 turboprops and CRJ regional jets) handles the short-haul Vancouver routes, while mainline Air Canada handles longer routes from YYJ.
WestJet provides crucial competition on island routes, particularly at YQQ and YYJ. Their Calgary hub makes them especially valuable for islanders connecting eastward.
Canada's ultra-low-cost carrier has had an on-again, off-again relationship with Vancouver Island. When they fly here, the fares can be genuinely cheap — $79–$149 each way to Calgary or Edmonton. But Flair has a track record of adding and dropping routes quickly, and their schedule reliability isn't what you'd get from Air Canada or WestJet.
Alaska's YYJ–Seattle route is more important than it looks. Seattle-Tacoma (SEA) is a major international hub with direct flights to Asia, Europe, and dozens of US cities. For some destinations — particularly Hawaii, the US South, or specific Asian routes — flying YYJ→SEA→destination can be faster and cheaper than going through YVR.
United operates seasonal summer service from YYJ to San Francisco (SFO), typically June through September. SFO is a Star Alliance hub, so this route connects into the full United global network. Useful for California-bound islanders and for Star Alliance redemptions.
A BC-based regional carrier that fills gaps the bigger airlines don't serve. Pacific Coastal uses Beechcraft 1900 and Saab 340 turboprops to connect smaller communities. Their routes shift periodically, but they've historically served:
Forget the marketing. Here's what flights actually cost when you're booking from Vancouver Island in 2025/2026. These are typical prices, not sale fares.
One way, economy. Air Canada dominates this route. Cheaper fares ($150–$200) available with 2+ weeks advance booking. Same-day or next-day bookings often $280–$350. This is the most-flown route on the island.
One way, economy. Both Air Canada and WestJet compete here, which helps. Book 3+ weeks ahead for the lower end. Peak summer and Christmas push prices to $350–$400+.
One way, economy on WestJet. Slightly cheaper than YYJ–YYC on average because there's less demand. Excellent value when booked 2–4 weeks ahead. This route fills fast over holidays — book early.
One way, economy. Direct flights seasonal only (Air Canada, WestJet summer). Rest of year: connect via YVR or YYC. Add $50–$100 if connecting. Budget $600–$1,200 round trip for cross-country.
One way, economy on Air Canada Express. Often slightly cheaper than YYJ–YVR because the aircraft are smaller (Dash 8 turboprops) and costs are lower. But fewer schedule options.
One way on Harbour Air. Dynamic pricing — early morning and midday flights tend to be cheapest. Premium for after-work departures. Multi-pass discounts bring it down to $120–$140/flight.
One way on Alaska Airlines. Competitive pricing because Alaska treats this as a feeder to their SEA hub. Book 2+ weeks ahead for sub-$200 fares. NEXUS card strongly recommended.
One way, economy. WestJet and Air Canada both serve this route. Flair adds capacity when operating, dropping prices significantly. One of the most price-volatile routes from the island.
If you're planning your cost of living on Vancouver Island, here's what to budget for flights based on how often you'll need to leave the island:
One expense newcomers often miss: when your YVR connecting flight departs early morning, you may need to stay overnight in Vancouver. A decent hotel near YVR runs $180–$280/night. If you're doing this 4–6 times a year, that's $700–$1,700 in hotel costs on top of your airfare. Factor this into your budget planning.
Every island resident faces this decision regularly. There's no single right answer — it depends on where you're going, whether you need your car, and how you value your time.
| Factor | BC Ferries | Flying (Conventional) | Float Plane |
|---|---|---|---|
| Victoria → Vancouver (door to door) | 3.5–4.5 hours | 2.5–3 hours (YYJ→YVR) | 1.5–2 hours (harbour to harbour) |
| Nanaimo → Vancouver (door to door) | 3–4 hours (Dep. Bay or Duke Pt) | 2.5–3 hours (YCD→YVR) | 1–1.5 hours (harbour to harbour) |
| Cost: Single adult, one way | $19.80 (foot) / $70+ (with car) | $150–$350 | $145–$210 |
| Cost: Family of 4, one way, with car | $110–$140 | $600–$1,400 + rental car | N/A (no car) |
| Vehicle transport | Yes — drive on, drive off | No | No |
| Luggage limits | Unlimited (it's your car) | Standard airline limits | 25 lbs carry-on only |
| Weather cancellations | Rare (ferries run in most conditions) | Occasional | Frequent (fog, wind) |
| Advance booking needed | Recommended (especially weekends) | Yes — cheaper with advance purchase | Yes — popular times sell out |
| Comfort & experience | Spacious, can walk around, food on board | Standard air travel | Stunning views, unique experience |
| Best for... | Families, large loads, budget-conscious | Time-sensitive, connecting flights | Business commuters, foot passengers |
After a year or two on the island, most residents develop an intuitive formula: ferry for family trips, cargo runs, and budget travel; fly for solo business, tight connections, and long weekends when the ferries are chaos. Many keep a car on the mainland (at a friend's or in a monthly parking spot near Horseshoe Bay or Tsawwassen) so they can fly over as foot passengers and still have wheels on arrival.
If you're moving from Vancouver, this calculus will quickly become second nature. It's one of the most distinctly "island" adaptations new residents make.
If you're going to be flying on and off the island regularly, here's how experienced residents minimize costs and maximize convenience.
If you're a regular float plane user, Harbour Air offers multi-ride passes that significantly reduce per-flight costs:
These passes are popular with consultants, lawyers, and other professionals who commute to Vancouver regularly. If you fly to Vancouver 2+ times per month, a multi-pass typically saves $40–$80 per round trip.
The right credit card can offset a significant chunk of island flight costs:
The key insight: pick one airline ecosystem and concentrate your spending there. Splitting between Aeroplan and WestJet Rewards means you never accumulate enough in either for meaningful redemptions. Most island residents settle into either the Air Canada/Aeroplan or WestJet/RBC ecosystem and build from there.
Both YYJ and YQQ have begun implementing rewards for frequent travellers:
If you're working remotely from Vancouver Island and your employer requires occasional trips to a mainland office, those flights may be deductible as employment expenses (if your employer signs a T2200). Self-employed islanders can deduct business travel flights directly. Consult an accountant, but don't leave this money on the table — for a frequent flyer, the tax savings on $5,000–$10,000 in annual flights are meaningful. See our guide to taxes and financial planning on the island.
Island residents don't have the luxury of a major international hub at their doorstep. Here's how to make global travel work.
For the vast majority of international destinations, you're connecting through Vancouver International Airport (YVR). This is just the reality of island life. YVR is a genuinely excellent international airport — Star Alliance hub, extensive Asia-Pacific routes, good European coverage, and smooth connections. But getting there from the island adds time, cost, and complexity to every international trip.
The typical international trip from Victoria: Fly YYJ→YVR (25 min flight), connect at YVR (minimum 90-minute connection for domestic→international), then fly internationally. Door-to-door, add 3–4 hours each way compared to living in Vancouver. Float plane to YVR South Terminal can work, but you'll need to shuttle to the main international terminal — add 20–30 minutes.
Victoria has a small but growing selection of direct international routes that can save you the YVR connection:
A huge number of Vancouver Island retirees — and we mean huge — head to Mexico, Hawaii, or the Caribbean for part of the winter. The island's grey, wet winters drive even the most committed residents south eventually. Here's what you need to know:
If you're retiring to Vancouver Island and planning to spend 2–3 months in Mexico or Arizona each winter, budget $1,500–$3,000 per person for flights annually (including bags and connection costs). Some snowbirds drive to the mainland, park, and fly from YVR to save on the island-to-mainland leg. Others embrace the convenience tax and fly from YYJ direct when charters are available.
Flight prices, availability, and airport chaos on Vancouver Island follow predictable seasonal patterns. Here's the calendar every island resident should know.
Peak everything. This is when Vancouver Island's airports are busiest, fares are highest, and parking lots are fullest. Tourism drives much of this — visitors flooding in to experience Tofino, island beaches, and whale watching. But it's also when the most routes operate: United's SFO service, expanded schedules on all carriers, and maximum float plane frequency.
The sweet spot for island air travel. Demand drops, fares decrease, and airports are quiet. This is when experienced islanders plan their mainland trips. The weather is still decent enough for reliable float plane service, but the summer crowds have evaporated.
A tale of two seasons. The Christmas/New Year period (Dec 15–Jan 5) is as expensive and busy as summer. Islanders flying home to visit family in Alberta or Ontario face peak pricing. But January through March (excluding spring break) is the quietest period — low fares, empty airports, and the best deals of the year on domestic flights.
Gradually building toward summer. Routes start expanding, fares begin climbing, but it's still more affordable than June–September. Spring break (mid-March) causes a short spike in family travel. Late April through May is an excellent window for affordable travel.
BC Day (August), Labour Day (September), Thanksgiving (October), and Easter are chaos periods for both ferries and flights. If you must travel on a long weekend, book flights 6+ weeks ahead and expect to pay a premium. Better yet: travel Tuesday before or Wednesday after the holiday. The price difference can be $100–$200 per flight.
Vancouver Island airports are mostly car-dependent. Here's the full picture for each airport.
Vancouver Island's airports are investing in growth. Here's what's on the horizon and how it might affect your travel options.
Victoria International has been steadily investing in terminal expansion and new route development. Key developments:
Comox Valley Airport has been the growth story on the island, with passenger numbers increasing faster than the other airports:
Harbour Air's electric seaplane program (the eBeaver, based on the de Havilland DHC-2 Beaver) is arguably the most exciting aviation development on the island. If successful, electric float planes could significantly reduce operating costs on short routes — potentially translating to lower fares for passengers. The initial target routes are the short hops between the Gulf Islands and Vancouver.
Several other companies are developing electric regional aircraft that could eventually serve routes like Victoria–Vancouver. The short distances involved (25–100 km) are ideal for early electric aviation technology. Don't expect cheap electric flights tomorrow, but within 5–10 years, this technology could meaningfully change the island air travel cost equation.
The Hullo fast ferry from Nanaimo to Vancouver has already shifted travel patterns for central island residents. If similar fast ferry services expand to other routes (Victoria–Vancouver has been discussed), it could create more competition for short-haul flights. More competition generally means better prices for islanders.
After years of flying on and off Vancouver Island, these are the lessons every resident eventually learns. Save yourself the trial and error.
Here's the honest truth that every long-term island resident will tell you: you eventually stop fighting the island's transportation constraints and start working with them. You batch your mainland trips. You plan further ahead. You get strategic about when you fly, when you ferry, and when you just stay put. And you discover that most of the time, you don't actually need to leave the island as often as you thought.
Vancouver Island is genuinely a complete place to live — with excellent healthcare, vibrant arts and culture, world-class outdoor recreation, and strong social communities. The people who love island life aren't the ones who've found a way to leave easily — they're the ones who've realized they don't need to leave as much as they expected.
Air travel is one piece of the puzzle. Our comprehensive guides cover everything from real estate to healthcare to the honest pros and cons of island living.