Canada · YYZ

Toronto

North America's most multicultural city — gleaming waterfront, Niagara Falls at your doorstep, and a neighbourhood for every world.

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Best Time to Visit

Jun–Aug & Sep–Oct

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Currency

Canadian Dollar (CAD)

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Language

English / French

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Airport Code

YYZ

About Toronto

Toronto is the most multicultural city on Earth — a UN-recognised fact that becomes viscerally real the moment you walk through its neighbourhoods. Kensington Market, Chinatown, Little Italy, Little Portugal, Greektown, Little India, Koreatown, and the West Indian communities of Rexdale all coexist within the city, producing a food culture of extraordinary breadth and authenticity. With over 200 languages spoken and nearly half the population born outside Canada, Toronto's diversity is not a demographic statistic but the lived texture of daily life.

The city sits on the north shore of Lake Ontario, and its waterfront — once largely industrial — has been transformed over decades into parks, ferry docks, and the Toronto Islands. A short ferry ride delivers you to a car-free archipelago of beaches and bicycle paths with some of the best skyline views of the city, including the CN Tower — at 553 metres, still among the tallest free-standing structures in the Western Hemisphere. The Distillery District, a beautifully preserved Victorian industrial complex turned arts and dining precinct, is among the city's most beloved and photographed spaces.

Toronto's position as a gateway city is exceptional. Niagara Falls — one of the natural wonders of the world — is 90 minutes away. The wine country of Niagara-on-the-Lake is alongside it. Algonquin Provincial Park, for autumn foliage and wilderness, is three hours north. Montréal is five hours east by train. For a major North American city, Toronto offers remarkable access to natural and cultural experiences across an entire region — making it an ideal base for exploring eastern Canada.

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Top Attractions in Toronto

Landmark
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CN Tower

Toronto's defining symbol — a 553-metre communications tower with a glass floor observation deck, revolving restaurant, and EdgeWalk (the world's highest external walk). Iconic city views.

Museum
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Royal Ontario Museum

Canada's largest museum — world-class collections of dinosaurs, ancient Egypt, the natural world, and Canadian art, anchored by Daniel Libeskind's striking crystal architectural addition.

Historic District
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Distillery District

A pedestrian-only Victorian industrial heritage district — 44 heritage buildings transformed into galleries, restaurants, boutiques, and studios. Canada's most photographed neighbourhood.

Neighbourhood
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Kensington Market

Toronto's most eclectic neighbourhood — a bohemian mix of vintage shops, international food stalls, street murals, and independent cafés. The city's cultural melting pot at its most colourful.

Nature
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Toronto Islands

A short ferry ride from downtown, the Toronto Islands offer car-free beaches, bike paths, and stunning skyline views back across the lake — a beloved summer escape for locals.

Day Trip
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Niagara Falls Day Trip

The world's most famous waterfalls are 1.5 hours from Toronto — the Canadian Horseshoe Falls, Maid of the Mist boat ride, and Journey Behind the Falls are unmissable experiences.

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Travel Tips · Toronto

  • Apply for your Canadian eTA online at canada.ca before booking flights — it costs CAD $7, takes minutes, and is approved within hours. Most nationalities need this even for short visits.
  • Take the UP Express from Pearson Airport to Union Station (25 min, CAD $12.35) rather than a taxi — it's faster, cheaper, and drops you directly into the heart of downtown.
  • Book the CN Tower's EdgeWalk and SkyPod tickets online in advance — the Edge Walk (world's highest external walk at 356m) sells out, especially in summer. EdgeWalk requires booking days ahead.
  • Go to St Lawrence Market on Saturday for the best breakfast — the famous peameal bacon sandwich from Carousel Bakery is a Toronto institution. The market has been running since 1803.
  • Use the PATH underground network in winter — 30km of underground walkways connect downtown hotels, office towers, Union Station, and the Eaton Centre shopping mall, keeping you warm between sights.

Visa Information

Most visitors to Canada need either an Electronic Travel Authorization (eTA, CAD $7) or a full visitor visa. Citizens of the USA need only a valid passport. Citizens of the UK, Australia, France, Germany, Japan, South Korea and 50+ other countries need an eTA — apply online at canada.ca before booking flights. Citizens of many other countries need a visitor visa through a Canadian embassy.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a visa to visit Toronto, Canada?

Most visitors to Canada need either a visa or an Electronic Travel Authorization (eTA). Citizens of 53 countries — including the UK, Australia, France, Germany, Japan, and South Korea — need only an eTA (CAD $7, applied online at canada.ca). US citizens need only a valid passport or NEXUS card. Citizens of many other countries need a full visitor visa applied through the Canadian embassy.

How do I get from Toronto Pearson Airport (YYZ) to the city?

The UP Express (Union Pearson Express) train is the fastest option — 25 minutes from Pearson Airport to Union Station in downtown Toronto, running every 15 minutes for CAD $12.35. TTC buses connect to the subway network for a cheaper option (~$3.20). Taxis cost CAD $55–70 and can take 30–60 minutes depending on traffic. Uber is reliable and usually cheaper than taxis.

How many days should I spend in Toronto?

3–4 days lets you see the CN Tower, Royal Ontario Museum, Distillery District, Kensington Market, St Lawrence Market, and the waterfront. A week allows a Niagara Falls day trip (1.5 hours by bus or train), plus exploration of further neighbourhoods like Little Italy, Greektown, Chinatown, and the Beaches. Summer festivals (June–August) add considerable value to a longer stay.

Is a Niagara Falls day trip from Toronto worth it?

Absolutely — Niagara Falls is 1.5 hours from downtown Toronto by GO Bus (CAD $15 return) or by car on the QEW. The Canadian side (Ontario) has the best views of the Horseshoe Falls. The Maid of the Mist boat ride and Journey Behind the Falls are the must-do experiences. Go early to beat crowds. Evening illuminations of the falls are spectacular. Book in advance in summer.

What is the weather like in Toronto and when should I visit?

Toronto has four distinct seasons. Summer (June–August) is warm and humid (20–30°C) — ideal for outdoor festivals, the waterfront, and island parks. Autumn (September–October) offers crisp weather and spectacular fall foliage. Winter (December–March) is cold with snowfall (-5 to -15°C) but the city has an extensive underground PATH network. Spring (April–May) is unpredictable but pleasant. June–August and September–October are the best times to visit.

Stopover in Toronto?

Quick layover guides — what to do at Toronto Pearson Airport with limited time.

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