Travel Power

Power Adapter for Canada

What plug and voltage Canada uses, whether you need an adapter or a converter, and exactly what to pack.

Canada uses Type A and B plugs at 120 V (60 Hz). Here is what that means for your chargers, and the one thing to check before you buy an adapter.

Canada at a glance

Plug type(s)Type A and B
Voltage120 V
Frequency60 Hz

Do you need an adapter?

Travelers from the US, Japan and Mexico share Type A/B. Visitors from the UK, EU and Australia need a plug adapter.

Canada matches the US standard: Type A/B at 120 V/60 Hz.

Adapter vs voltage converter — the part people get wrong

A plug adapter only changes the shape of the pins so your plug fits the socket. A voltage converter changes the electricity itself. The good news: most travel electronics — phones, laptops, tablets, camera and most modern chargers — are dual-voltage, rated 100–240 V. For those you need only a plug adapter, even in Canada. Look for "INPUT: 100–240V" printed on the charger. Single-voltage appliances (some hair dryers, straighteners, small kettles) are the ones that may need a converter — or are better bought locally.

Universal travel adapter (USB-C)

A single universal adapter with USB-C Power Delivery covers Canada and most other destinations, and charges a phone and laptop from one socket. The most useful sub-$40 item for international travel.

Browse universal adapters on Amazon

Before you fly

FAQ: power and plugs in Canada

What plug type does Canada use?

Canada uses Type A and B plugs at 120 V, 60 Hz. If your devices use a different plug type, you will need a travel plug adapter.

Do I need a voltage converter for Canada?

Canada runs at 120 V. Most modern phones, laptops and camera chargers are dual-voltage (rated 100–240 V) and need only a plug adapter, not a converter. Check the small print on your charger — if it says 100–240 V, you are fine. Single-voltage items such as some hair tools may need a converter.

Will my phone charger work in Canada?

Almost certainly, with the right plug adapter. Phone and laptop chargers are nearly always dual-voltage, so they handle Canada's 120 V supply; you just need an adapter that fits a Type A and B socket.

Gently Yonder tip: Reference data like plug types and voltage is stable, but hotels and new builds vary. If a socket doesn't match, hotel reception almost always keeps spare adapters at the desk.

Disclosure: this page contains affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate, Gently Yonder may earn from qualifying purchases at no extra cost to you. Plug and voltage data is provided as general preparation guidance — always check your device labels and confirm locally.