Gold panning in northern Ontario is real, but don't expect to get rich
Northern Ontario gold panning is a real pursuit, but riches are not guaranteed. Geologist Mark Hall, a Sudbury-based landman, has staked around 1,000 claims and studied Ontario’s placer miners who extract from surface soils and rivers. The region’s glacial history—about 10,000 years since the last advance—means rivers haven’t reworked like those in British Columbia or the western United States. Gold’s density, roughly 20 times that of water, helps it settle in pans, but panning typically yields heavy mineral concentrates rather than overnight wealth. The prospecting life remains appealing for some, though Alaska and Yukon reality shows paint far larger fortunes than most Ontario finds. Prospective panners should temper expectations: exploration remains a major challenge, and only a fraction reach mine status.




