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Toronto

Toronto

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Gate8 Global Team

Toronto deserves 2–4 days: one for downtown and the CN Tower/harborfront, one for Kensington Market and Chinatown, and a spare day (or a half-day add-on) for Niagara Falls, 90 minutes away. Base yourself downtown or in the Entertainment District for walkability, or in the West End (Trinity Bellwoods/Ossington) for a more local, restaurant-heavy stay. Budget roughly $120–220/night for a mid-range hotel, and $15–30 per meal.

Toronto doesn't try to be pretty in the postcard sense — it's a working financial capital, dense and a little gray in winter, that happens to also be one of the most ethnically diverse cities on the planet. That diversity is the actual reason to come: the food, the neighborhoods, the genuine mix of the whole world living in one place.

How many days do you need in Toronto?

Two to four days covers it well. Two if Toronto is a stopover before or after the Rockies or Montreal; four if it's your main city base, with a day trip to Niagara Falls built in. The CN Tower and waterfront take half a day; the rest is genuinely about wandering neighborhoods and eating.

Where to stay

NeighborhoodBest forVibe
Downtown / Entertainment DistrictFirst-timers, walkability to the CN Tower and harborfrontDense, touristy near the tower, quieter a few blocks over
YorkvilleA more upscale, boutique-hotel stayLeafy, higher-end shopping and dining
West End (Trinity Bellwoods, Ossington, Kensington)Food-focused travelers, a more local feelIndependent restaurants, vintage shops, younger crowd
The Annex / near U of TBudget-conscious stays with easy transit accessStudenty, good subway access, cheaper
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Buy a Presto card (Toronto's transit card) at any subway station the moment you arrive — the TTC subway and streetcar network covers the whole city well, and downtown traffic and parking are both genuinely painful.

What's actually worth doing

  1. CN Tower — touristy, yes, but the view is real; the glass floor is a fun five minutes, not a must. Skip the priciest 'VIP' upgrade packages.
  2. Kensington Market — a chaotic, colorful few blocks of vintage shops, Caribbean and Latin American food stalls, and genuinely no chain stores. Go hungry, wander without a plan.
  3. St. Lawrence Market — a proper food hall, best for a weekday breakfast (the peameal bacon sandwich is the famous order).
  4. Toronto Islands — a 15-minute ferry from downtown to a genuinely quiet, car-free island park with skyline views back at the city — the best cheap afternoon in town.
  5. Distillery District — a pedestrian-only historic industrial area, now galleries, restaurants, and (in December) a well-done Christmas market.

Mistakes worth avoiding

  • Driving downtown — parking is expensive and scarce, and the subway/streetcar network genuinely covers everything you'll want to see.
  • Visiting in January without checking the actual forecast — Toronto winters can hit well below freezing with real windchill; pack for it seriously, not 'cold weather at home' seriously.
  • Skipping Niagara Falls because it feels like a cliché — it's a cliché because it's genuinely worth seeing, and it's barely 90 minutes away.

Downtown or West End both work well for first-timers

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Where to stay in Toronto — hotels

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Questions people actually ask

How many days should I spend in Toronto?
Two to four days works well — two if it's a stopover, four if it's your main base with a Niagara Falls day trip included. Most of what makes Toronto worth visiting (the food, the neighborhoods) doesn't need much more time than that.
What's the best way to get around Toronto?
The TTC (subway plus streetcars) covers the city well and is far easier than driving downtown. Get a Presto card at any station on arrival — it works across the whole system with a tap.
Is Toronto expensive?
Mid-range by North American standards — cheaper than Vancouver for hotels, comparable to most major US cities for food and transit. See our money guide for specific numbers in USD.

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