Welcome to
Toronto
Canada
Toronto is one of the world's most genuinely multicultural cities — a Canadian metropolis where over half the population was born outside the country, and where Chinatown, Little Italy, Little India, Greektown, and Koreatown each offer a vivid slice of their homelands within a single city. The CN Tower, the Royal Ontario Museum, and the Art Gallery of Ontario anchor a strong cultural offering, while the revitalised waterfront and the Victorian-era Distillery District have given the city new gathering places. Toronto's food scene directly reflects its diversity: it is one of the best cities in the world to eat dim sum, Korean barbecue, Jamaican patties, and West African egusi soup, often within a few blocks of each other.
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10 places

Art Gallery of Ontario
Frank Gehry reimagined his childhood haunt into one of North America's great art museums.

CN Tower
Toronto's defining skyline spike, with a glass floor 342 metres up.

Casa Loma
Toronto's only castle, built by a millionaire and full of secrets.

Distillery District
A Victorian whiskey complex turned into Toronto's most atmospheric pedestrian village.

High Park
Toronto's great urban park, where cherry blossoms, wildlife, and city life collide.

Kensington Market
Toronto's most gloriously chaotic neighbourhood, where counterculture never sold out.

Ripley's Aquarium of Canada
Walk through a living ocean tunnel beneath two million litres of water.

Royal Ontario Museum
Toronto's blockbuster museum, wrapped in a genuinely bizarre crystal.

St Lawrence Market
Toronto's 200-year-old market hall, still the city's best food shopping.

Toronto Islands
A car-free island escape with skyline views, right in the city.
Why should you go to Toronto
What other travelers have to say, based on real reviews.
