Northumberland Ferries Limited
Northumberland Ferries Limited is a ferry company operating in eastern Canada and headquartered in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. NFL is also the owner of subsidiary Bay Ferries Limited through its holding company.
Wood Islands–Caribou Ferry
NFL has operated the ferry service that carries the Trans-Canada Highway across the eastern part of the Northumberland Strait between Wood Islands, Prince Edward Island, and Caribou, Nova Scotia, since it was established in 1941 by the Government of Canada. This service is seasonal and operates only between May and December on account of heavy sea ice and the lack of icebreaking ferries. NFL also operates the ferry terminals in Wood Islands and Caribou, both of which are owned by the Government of Canada.Until 2022, NFL operated two vessels owned by the Government of Canada: MV Confederation, built in 1993, and MV Holiday Island, built in 1971. On July 22, 2022, Holiday Island suffered a fire, causing ferry crossings to be cancelled. The MV Saaremaa 1 was loaned by the as a temporary replacement, and began operations on August 20, 2022, and returned for the 2023 and 2024 season.
While Confederation has been operated exclusively by NFL since she was built, Holiday Island joined NFL in 1997 after being declared surplus by previous operator Marine Atlantic upon completion of the Confederation Bridge. Following the 2022 fire, Holiday Island was declared by Transport Canada to be beyond repair and would be scrapped. The federal government purchased the Norwegian ferry MV Fanafjord in 2023; the replacement ferry arrived in Pictou on January 26, 2025, and now bears the name MV Northumberland. A brand new ferry is expected to be delivered in 2028.
Fares are paid only when exiting Prince Edward Island. The other major crossing of the Northumberland Strait, the Confederation Bridge from Prince Edward Island to New Brunswick, does likewise. Therefore, travellers entering the island on the ferry and exiting on the bridge or vice versa need pay for only one of the links.
The route has long been subsidized by Transport Canada; under the Ferry Services Contribution Program, the subsidy was most recently extended to 2027.