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Top: Regional: North_America: Canada: Ontario: Localities: N: Niagara_Falls: Travel_and_Tourism: Lodging

As a major tourist location, Niagara Falls offers its visitors a wide choice of overnight accommodation. It ranges from luxurious suites to low-cost efficiency units. A high percentage of them have their own websites, and they often incorporate an online reservation facility. For the sake of convenience, they are separated in this segment of the Open Directory into three subcategories: Bed and Breakfast, Hotels, and Motels.

Bed and Breakfast

Most of the guest homes that once served visitors to Niagara Falls have given way to the abundance of modern hotels and motels, but a respectable number of them remain. The majority are on the River Road, overlooking the Niagara River Gorge, and many date back to Victorian and Edwardian days. Frequently, their owners have been welcoming guests for a considerable period of time and all of them take great pride in their homes.

Hotels and Motels

Please only submit sites of hotels in Niagara Falls here.
There are numerous hotels, motels, and B&B establishments in Niagara Falls. Most of them are members of the city’s Visitor and Convention Bureau, and a good number of them have their own websites, often with an online reservation facility. They vary in size, scale, price, and, of course, location. The great majority, however, are within a few minutes drive or walk from the city’s two main attractions: the falls themselves and the casino. Their exact addresses are given in the websites listed in the appropriate Lodging sections of the Open Directory, but, on the whole, they are each situated in one of three clusters, as follows.

1. In sight of the falls or a short walk from them, on the River Road and the streets parallel to it, often with the word “Fallsview” as part of their name.

2. Along or close to Clifton Hill, the street that rises up from the River Road as a lively, entertaining strip that specializes in catering to the young at heart.

3. From the beginning to the end of Lundy’s Lane, the east/west street that runs from the top of Clifton Hill to the city's outskirts. Even here, visitors are no more than a half-hour away from the falls and its many attractions.


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Last update: 20:42 PT, Monday, October 30, 2006 - edit