What's Open and Closed in Guelph on Canada Day 2026 (Plus Where to See the Fireworks)
Canada turns 159 this year, and if you have lived in Guelph for any length of time, you already know the city does not do this holiday quietly. Wednesday, July 1, 2026 is a full statutory holiday across Ontario, which means the usual Canada Day questions are already showing up in everyone's group chats. Is the LCBO open. Is the grocery store open. What time are the fireworks. So here is the real answer, pulled straight from the City of Guelph, with everything you need to plan your day.
Start with the most important distinction, because people mix this up every year. Canada Day is not the same as Victoria Day. Ontario recently changed the rules so retailers can choose to stay open on Victoria Day if they want. Canada Day did not get that same treatment. It is still one of the nine protected holidays under Ontario's Retail Business Holidays Act, so the LCBO and most major grocery chains in Guelph are legally required to close for the day. If your plan involves a last minute beer run or picking up something for a barbecue, do that shopping on Tuesday, June 30.
City services follow the same pattern. All City of Guelph administration offices and City Hall are closed, along with every Guelph Public Library branch and all city run recreation centres. The Waste Resource Innovation Centre is closed too, and if your garbage or recycling day normally falls on or after July 1, expect your pickup to slide one day later than usual for the rest of that week. Sleeman Centre, Centennial Arena, Exhibition Arena, River Run Centre, McCrae House, and the Guelph Sports Dome are all closed as well. Banks are closed, though your debit card and online banking will work fine, and Canada Post is not delivering mail that day.
A few things stay open regardless. The Guelph Civic Museum is running normal hours. Outdoor splash pads and wading pools are open for the season, including the Market Square wading pool, which runs from 10:30 in the morning until 7:30 at night. Most restaurants, cafes, and patios that would normally be open on a Wednesday plan to stay open too, though a quick call ahead never hurts if you have your heart set on a specific spot.
Getting around the city is actually one of the easier parts of the day. Guelph Transit runs a full holiday schedule with six zoned routes plus the Route 99 Mainline, so you are not stuck without options if you are heading downtown or out to Riverside Park. And here is a nice touch worth knowing about: transit is free for everyone after 7 p.m. on Canada Day, sponsored by a local Century 21 brokerage, which makes getting to and from the fireworks a lot less of a headache than finding parking.
Speaking of fireworks, the main event in Guelph this year is the Canada Day Celebration at Riverside Park, 709 Woolwich Street, running from 3 p.m. to 10 p.m. Supercrawl Productions is putting it on for the second year in a row, and the early word is that this year's version leans even bigger, with bouncy castles, face painting, live music, a family movie night, artisan and food vendors, and a fireworks finale at 10 p.m. If you are trying to figure out where to watch fireworks in Guelph this year, Riverside Park is the answer.
If you would rather set off your own fireworks at home, Guelph permits fireworks on private property on Canada Day between 9 a.m. and 11 p.m. Be thoughtful about your neighbours and the time of night. Once you are finished, soak any used sparklers or fireworks in a bucket of water for a full 24 hours before they go in your grey cart. Unused or still active fireworks should never go in any of your bins. Reach out to the manufacturer directly for proper disposal.
There is one more thing worth a look if you are around the city for the next week and a half. Guelph Museums is running Backyard Theatre at McCrae House from July 2 to 11, an original musical called La Montanara performed by Mike Ford and Murray Foster, telling the story of Canadian soldiers in the Italian campaign of World War Two. Shows run from 8 to 9:30 each evening, so it is an easy add to a summer week if you are looking for something a little different than fireworks and festivals.
I always find Canada Day is one of those days that quietly sells a neighbourhood. You see streets full of kids on bikes, neighbours setting up lawn chairs together, the smell of barbecues drifting down the block, and it is a pretty honest preview of what living somewhere actually feels like day to day. If you have been on the fence about a move to Guelph or you are trying to get a real read on a specific street or neighbourhood before making an offer, days like this one are worth paying attention to. And if you want a second opinion on what a particular area is actually like to live in, not just what the listing photos show, I am always happy to talk it through.
Happy Canada Day, Guelph.
Hours and event details reflect information published by the City of Guelph as of late June 2026. Confirm directly with individual businesses before heading out, since hours can change.
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