Potholes in Mont-Tremblant, QC

Population 10,992 · Quebec

This page shows pothole reports submitted in Mont-Tremblant, Quebec. RoadRot is a free, independent platform — anyone can report a pothole, and reports get forwarded to the responsible municipality.

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Why Mont-Tremblant gets potholes

Mont-Tremblant sits in the Laurentian Mountains with a humid continental climate, meaning winters are long and hard and spring arrives with a vengeance. The shoulder seasons, roughly November through December and again March through April, are where the real pavement damage happens: temperatures swing back and forth across freezing, water works its way into cracks, freezes, expands, and the road surface breaks apart. Heavy seasonal resort traffic on top of that cycle speeds up the damage considerably. CAA-Québec has estimated that pothole damage costs Quebec taxpayers nearly $1.5 billion a year province-wide, and the Laurentians' elevation means conditions here are often harsher than on the Montreal plain.

How to report potholes in Mont-Tremblant

Mont-Tremblant doesn't appear to operate a 311 service, so for potholes on municipal streets your best bet is contacting the city's Public Works department (Service des travaux publics) directly through ville.mont-tremblant.qc.ca. For potholes on Route 117 or other numbered provincial roads, those fall under the Ministère des Transports du Québec (MTQ) and can be reported through the Quebec 511 system. RoadRot works alongside those channels: you drop a pin on the public map, the community can confirm the report to show it's a real problem, and if you want to apply some pressure you can use the built-in email-your-rep tool to send a complaint directly to your municipal or provincial representative. RoadRot doesn't contact the city on your behalf, but a public, confirmed report is a lot harder to ignore than a single phone call.
Guides

Hit a pothole in Mont-Tremblant and damaged your vehicle? Read the Quebec pothole damage claim guide — deadlines, where to file, and what evidence you need. New to RoadRot? See how to report a pothole.

Common questions

Who is responsible for fixing potholes in Mont-Tremblant?

It depends on the road. The City of Mont-Tremblant's Public Works department handles local municipal streets, while the Ministère des Transports du Québec (MTQ) is responsible for provincial routes like Route 117. If you're not sure which category a road falls into, the MTQ's Quebec 511 site is a good starting point to check jurisdiction.

Does Mont-Tremblant have a 311 service for pothole complaints?

Based on what we can find, Mont-Tremblant doesn't operate a 311 line. For municipal road issues, your best option is to contact the city directly through ville.mont-tremblant.qc.ca. If that's changed and you have better information, let us know using the contact form on this page.

What's the worst time of year for potholes in Mont-Tremblant?

Spring is the peak season, typically March through April, when freeze-thaw cycles are most frequent and snowmelt saturates the road base. The Laurentians' elevation means those temperature swings around the freezing point happen more often and more intensely than in lower-lying parts of Quebec. Resort traffic picking back up at the same time doesn't help.

Can I claim vehicle damage from a pothole in Quebec?

Quebec does have a process for claiming compensation from road authorities when a pothole causes vehicle damage, but you generally need to show the authority knew or should have known about the defect and failed to act. You'd file a claim with either the city or the MTQ depending on who maintains the road. Documenting the pothole with a photo, a dated RoadRot report, and any repair receipts strengthens your case.

How does RoadRot help with potholes in Mont-Tremblant?

RoadRot is a public, crowdsourced map where anyone can pin a pothole, rate how bad it is, and add a photo. Other drivers can confirm the same report, which builds a visible record of the problem. There's also an email-your-rep tool you can use to send a complaint about a specific pothole straight to your municipal or provincial representative. RoadRot doesn't automatically notify the city or contact 311, but public reports with community confirmations create real pressure for a fix.