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- Airlines will always try to sit children with their parents (subject to check-in)
- Some airlines will allow travel for unaccompanied minors. Please email us to check.
- The fare is based on the child's age on the date of travel.
- More detailed information can be found here Traveling with children
- Most airlines will let infants travel with their parent(s) for free. However some airlines will charge up to 10% of the adult ticket price. Click on 'Price Breakdown' to find out more.
- If you are pregnant, but due before the flight departure date, please contact us once your baby is born and has a name. We can then add him/her to your ticket.
- Infants will not be given a seat. The airlines expect parents to travel with them on their lap.
- Airlines regard infants as being under 24 months old.
- The fare is based on the child's age on the date of travel.
- More detailed information can be found here Traveling with children
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About Canadian North
Canadian North is a Canadian airline headquartered in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. The airline operates scheduled passenger services to areas in Nunavut and the Northwest Territories of Canada.
Canadian North offer scheduled flights to 18 destinations in the Northwest Territories and Nunavut, through southern gateways of Edmonton and Ottawa. Canadian North is 100% aboriginal owned by the Inuvialuit Development Corporation, representing the Inuvialuit of the Western Arctic.
Canadian North's main base is Edmonton Airport and was founded in 1989 as a subsidiary of Canadian Airlines. This was to provide focus towards the northern Canadian communities.
Canadian North Airline has gone through many changes since the 1980's as was purchased by another holding company, Norterra and utilised 3 different livery schemes, the airline changed its current image in 2003. The logo displays distinct features of the north of Canada - the midnight sun, the polar bear and the Northern Lights.
The airline codeshares some flights with First Air until 16th May 2017.
Canadian North and its founding companies - Canadian Airlines, Pacific Western Airlines, Transair and Nordair - have proudly provided safe, reliable and efficient passenger and cargo services to Northerners for more than 80 years.
Canadian North Baggage
Carry-on Baggage
Canadian North allow passengers to bring one piece of carry-on baggage. This must not weight more than 10kg and must fit within the following dimensions: 23cm x 41cm x 57cm.
In addition, passengers are allowed one personal item. This could be items such as a briefcase, laptop case or a handbag.
Checked Baggage
Checked Baggage allowance for Canadian North flights depends on the number of bags and the type of ticket purchased. Each checked bag must be 23kgs (50lbs). Please see below to check your ticket fare alongside baggage allowance and additional fees.
Super-Flex
1st Bag - Free
2nd Bag - Free
3rd Bag - Free
Flex
1st Bag - Free
2nd Bag - Free
3rd Bag - $78.75 - $86.25
Saver
1st Bag - Free
2nd Bag - $36.75 - $40.25
3rd Bag - $78.75 - $86.25
Pivut
1st Bag - Free
2nd Bag - $36.75 - $40.25
3rd Bag - $78.75 - $86.25
Canadian North Check-In Information
Online Check-In
Canadian North offer web check-in 24 hours before departure for flights which are operated by Canadian North. It can be accessed here.
Airport Check-In
Airport Check-in times for Canadian North flights vary depending on the route travelling.
For Flights departing from Yellowknife, Iqaluit, Edmonton or Ottawa, which are operated by Canadian North, check-in will close 45 minutes before departure time.
For Flights from any other departure destination, but still operated by Canadian North, check-in will close 30 minutes before departure time.
Canadian North recommend that passengers arrive at the airport at least 60 minutes before flight departure time for domestic flights within Canada. For flights where you need to clear security, such as Edmonton, Ottawa, Yellowknife and Iqaluit, they recommend 90 minutes before scheduled departure time.
Canadian North Destinations
Canada
Northwest Territories - Yellowknife, Norman Wells, Inuvik.
Alberta - Edmonton
Nunavut - Cambridge Bay, Cape Dorset, Gjoa Haven, Hall Beach, Igloolik, Iqaluit, Kugaaruk, Kugluktuk, Pangnirtung, Pond Inlet, Qikiqtarjuaq, Rankin Inlet and Taloyoak
Ontario - Ottawa
Charter Routes
In addition to the scheduled domestic destinations in Canada above, Canadian North also operate flights to other destinations through their chartered flights:
Canada - Vancouver, Comox, Prince Rupert, Terrace, Prince George, Grande Prairie, Abbotsford, Kamloops, Kelowna, Calgary, Fort McMurray, Resolute Bay, Churchill, Saskatoon, Winnipeg, Montreal, Peterborough, London, Hamilton, Toronto, Quebec, Miramichi, Moncton, Sydney, Thunder Bay Halifax, Deer Lake, St. John’s.
Greenland - Kangerlussuaq and Nuuk
USA - Las Vegas, Omaha, Chicago, New York, Nashville, Augusta, Myrtle Beach and Miami.
Mexico - Cancun, Guadalajara and Cabo San Lucas.
Norway - Tromso
Canadian North Route Map
Canadian North Fleet
Canadian North Airlines operate its scheduled flights and charter services from the following fleet:
Boeing 737-300
Boeing 737-200 Combi
Boeing 737-300 Combi
Bombardier Dash 8
Alternative Airlines to Canadian North
Please click on the logos below to find out more about airlines that fly similar routes to Canadian North Airlines:
Canadian North Hub Airport
Yellowknife Airport
Yellowknife Airport is a Canadian Airport which runs both commercial and corporate aviation services. As one of three airport hubs for Canada North, it is located 5 minute drive from the city of Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada. It is owned by, and operated by the Government of the Northwest Territories, Department of Transportation. It is also the hub airport for Air Tindi, First Air and Northwestern Air.
Edmonton Airport
Edmonton Airport is another of the three airport hubs for Canadian North. The airport operates non-stop, scheduled flights to other major cities domestically but also to the USA, Mexico, the Caribbean, Europe and Central America. In all of Canada, it is the largest major airport by total land area, and the fifth-busiest when looking at passengers. In 2017, for example, it served nearly 8 million passenger.s
Iqaluit Airport
The final of the three hub airports for Canadian North, Iqaluit Airport is located next to the town of Iqaluit in Nunavut, Canada. It is used for both scheduled commercial passenger services, and also has military uses.
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Canadian North News
April 3rd 2018
Canadian North promotion
Canadian North have a sping offer for all their round-trip flights between Ottawa and Iqaluit if you make a booking before Sunday April 22nd 2018 and you are travelling between 9 April 2018 and 25 April 2018. Search for Canadian North flights for cheaper than usual rates.
February 17th 2018
Canadian North gets futuristic with Fetchable
Fetchable is Canadian North' s new internet-based service.“We have available space on our aircraft and we’re looking for ways to fill it,” said Canadian North president Steve Hankirk.“One of the things we’ve talked about for quite some time is having a delivery model, both north and south, that’s robust and timely, and that we’re going to use latest technology in.”
The partnership with BBE Expediting promises to deliver product to the Nunavut communities on its flight plans from anywhere in the world. It also promises one-day service for perishables from the south. The service is available in Nunavut wherever Canadian North flies: Pond Inlet, Qikiqtarjuaq, Pangnirtung, Iqaluit, Cape Dorset, Hall Beach, Iglulik, Rankin Inlet, Kugaaruk, Taloyoak, Gjoa Haven, Kugluktuk and Cambridge Bay.
Fetchable was developed over the course of the last six months and launched in early February. “Any number of individuals and retailers can use Fetchable on-line. It’s very simple to use. Any individual or retailer can use it to ship cargo in a cost-effective manner to the North, or, quite frankly, if you’ve got goods to ship to the south, you can connect to a network and basically get it anywhere,” said Hankirk. Any perishables transported via Fetchable will be treated like luggage, meaning it will get to the community on the same day it’s shipped. The company is even looking to use special German boxes, Fetchable-branded, that will help keep perishables fresh and easily identifiable.
August 2017
No evidence of anti-competitive acts between First Air and Canadian North:
Investigation began in 2016 amid predatory pricing allegations. The Competition Bureau has found no evidence of anti-competitive acts between First Air and Canadian North in its investigation of predatory pricing toward the now-defunct GoSarvaq. While the bureau found First Air and Canadian North's seat sales, which coincided with GoSarvaq's launch, had an impact on GoSarvaq, "the Bureau did not find sufficient evidence to conclude that these were anti-competitive acts as required by the [Competition] Act,"according to a statement from the bureau. The seat sales saw one-way tickets along theOttawa-Iqaluitroute gobelow $500 from the roughly regular$1,200 fare. The bureau looked at whether the bigger airlines dropped their prices so low that they would make less money than not flying at all. If they did, with the intent to recoup the lost revenues after GoSarvaq went out of business, it would be illegal. But the bureau didn't find any evidence to indicate the airlines broke any laws. Although the Bureau found evidence indicating the bigger airlines saw GoSarvaq as a threat, and that the airlines took deliberate actions in response to GoSarvaq's launch, it found no evidence that First Air and Canadian North were price-fixing with each other.
Canadian North says its pleased with the conclusions from the Bureau, along with how the bureau acknowledged the challenges of flying in the North. As for the alleged predatory pricing along the Ottawa-Iqaluit route, the airline says the route is important to its operations in Nunavut as a gateway to the Eastern Arctic. "Whether profitable or not, we'd never want to surrender market share on that route," said Canadian North's communications manager Kelly Lewis, adding it's also an important cargo route. "We've operated for two decades on that route, almost. We've worked hard to build a lot of market share. To not respond [to GoSarvaq's low introductory rate] would have been, basically, surrendering and put the sustainability of our business at risk and certainly put jobs at risk." Asked why customers haven't seen a similar seat sale since, Lewis said GoSarvaq's initial fare was an introductory offer. "You have to compete to a changing market conditions, and we were comfortable, for the short term, doing that," Lewis said. "Is that a price that we we would want to offer on an ongoing basis? I wouldn't think so, no. But nobody had stated that was going to be a permanent standing price for that route." The competition bureau also investigated First Air and Canadian North's codeshare agreement —which saw both airlines sell seats on each other's planes on certain routes — but closed the investigation after First Air ended the codeshare agreement in May.
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