Power plugs in Canada
Canada uses Type A and B power outlets, running at 120V / 60Hz.
Same as the US — bring your North American devices, no adapter needed.
What the plugs look like
Type A
Two flat parallel pins (US/Japan, ungrounded)
Type B
Two flat pins + round ground pin (US/Canada grounded)
Do you need an adapter? (from your home country)
Look up your home country below. The verdict tells you whether you need a plug adapter, a voltage converter, both, or nothing.
From United States (Type A/B, 120V):
✓ Plug fits AND voltage matches — no adapter or converter needed.
From United Kingdom (Type G, 230V):
Different plug AND different voltage (230V → 120V). Adapter required. Voltage converter required for hair dryers, curling irons, and old non-dual-voltage devices.
From Germany (Type C/F, 230V):
Different plug AND different voltage (230V → 120V). Adapter required. Voltage converter required for hair dryers, curling irons, and old non-dual-voltage devices.
From France (Type E, 230V):
Different plug AND different voltage (230V → 120V). Adapter required. Voltage converter required for hair dryers, curling irons, and old non-dual-voltage devices.
From Australia (Type I, 230V):
Different plug AND different voltage (230V → 120V). Adapter required. Voltage converter required for hair dryers, curling irons, and old non-dual-voltage devices.
From Japan (Type A/B, 100V):
Plug fits but voltage differs (100V → 120V). Check your device's label — most laptops, phones, and modern shavers are dual-voltage (100-240V) and work fine. Hair dryers, curling irons, and old appliances often need a voltage converter.
Quick check on your device: look for the input rating — usually printed on the power brick. If it says "100-240V" you only need a plug adapter (no converter). If it says "120V" or "230V" only, you need a converter for the other voltage.
What to buy
- Universal travel adapter — covers Types A/B/C/E/F/G/I in one unit ($15-30). Best for one-bag travelers crossing multiple regions. Look for one with built-in USB-C PD for phone fast-charging.
- Single-country adapter — $5-10 if you're only going to Canada and home. Smaller, lighter, less to fuss with.
- Voltage converter (step-up) — only if you're bringing a 230V-only device from Europe/Asia/Africa to Canada. Most modern devices are dual-voltage and don't need this.
- Multi-outlet strip from home — let one adapter charge 5 devices. Saves bringing 5 adapters.
