Canada's multicultural megacity — CN Tower, Niagara Falls, legendary food markets, and an arts scene that punches well above its weight. Direct from London in under 8 hours.
Toronto is a city that surprises. Canada's largest urban centre is often overshadowed by its more flamboyant southern neighbours, but visitors consistently find it one of the most liveable, vibrant and genuinely welcoming cities in the world. Over half of its residents were born outside Canada, and that diversity translates directly into the food — Chinatown, Little Portugal, Little Italy, Greektown, Little India, and Koreatown all sit within cycling distance of each other, and the eating is remarkable at every price point. The CN Tower, standing 553 metres above the lakefront, remains one of the great engineering spectacles — the glass floor and EdgeWalk are not for the faint-hearted. The Distillery District, a beautifully preserved Victorian industrial complex now filled with galleries, restaurants, and independent shops, is among the most atmospheric urban spaces in North America. Kensington Market offers a more bohemian counterpoint. A day trip to Niagara Falls is essentially mandatory — the sheer force of the horseshoe falls in person bears no comparison to photographs. For theatre and music, the city rivals much larger global centres, and October's TIFF film festival draws Hollywood to the city every year. Autumn, when the maple trees turn, is genuinely spectacular.
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| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Visa (UK passport) | eTA required — apply online at canada.ca/eTA. Costs CAD $7 (~£4), valid 5 years or until passport expiry. Apply before you book your flight. No eTA needed if entering by land or sea. |
| Currency | Canadian Dollar (CAD). Cards accepted everywhere; contactless standard. Exchange rates at airports are poor — use ATMs in the city centre for better rates. Tipping 15–18% expected at restaurants. |
| Time zone | UTC−5 (Eastern Standard Time) / UTC−4 (EDT, Mar–Nov). Currently 5 hours behind the UK in winter, 4 hours in summer. |
| Language | English and French (both official). Toronto is predominantly English-speaking. French is more prevalent in Quebec — if extending your trip to Montreal, some French is appreciated. |
| Best time to visit | June to August for warm weather and outdoor events. September–October for fall foliage and fewer crowds. Winter is cold (can reach −15°C) but the city remains active — bundle up and embrace it. |
Toronto has a true continental climate — properly cold winters where −15°C windchill is routine in January and February, and warm summers with lake-effect breezes that make the waterfront and patio season genuinely great. The sweet spot is June to September, when outdoor patios fill up, the Toronto Islands come alive, and TIFF brings Hollywood to town in September. Winter flights are cheapest by far, but you'll want to know why.
Average daytime high / overnight low. Green outline = great month to visit.