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Canada — North American Dining Guide

Best Restaurants in Toronto

Canada's largest dining scene and the only Canadian metropolitan with a published Michelin Guide. Two-star sushi in Yorkville, Italian in the Westin Harbour Castle, blind tasting menus on Spadina, and a Japanese-Italian counter in Little Portugal.

10Editorial Picks Live
Editor's Guide · Top 10 Restaurants in Toronto
7Occasions Covered
2026Editorial Edition
At a glance

The best restaurants in Toronto for 2026 are led by Sushi Masaki Saito — edomae omakase. Runners-up by editorial rank: Alo, Aburi Hana, Don Alfonso 1890, Edulis.

The Toronto List

Ten editorial picks, ranked by the only filter that matters: why you are dining.

$ Under C$30   $$ C$30–60   $$$ C$60–120   $$$$ C$120+
Sushi Masaki Saito — Toronto
1
Solo Dining
Toronto — Edomae Omakase

Sushi Masaki Saito

Edomae Omakase $$$$

Canada's only two-Michelin-star restaurant. Masaki Saito left a New York three-star to build a 10-seat omakase counter in a Yorkville Victorian — the most disciplined sushi room in the country.

Alo — Toronto
2
Close a Deal
Toronto — Modern French Tasting

Alo

Modern French Tasting $$$$

Patrick Kriss's third-floor blind tasting room above Queen West. The most disciplined modern fine-dining kitchen in Canada and Toronto's most reliable splurge.

Aburi Hana — Toronto
3
Birthday
Toronto — Modern Japanese Kaiseki

Aburi Hana

Modern Japanese Kaiseki $$$$

Modern kaiseki on Yorkville's quietest stretch — 18-course tasting, hinoki-and-stone room, and a chef's counter that runs the most architecturally precise Japanese kitchen in Canada outside the two-star.

Don Alfonso 1890 — Toronto
4
Birthday
Toronto — Italian Fine Dining

Don Alfonso 1890

Italian Fine Dining $$$$

The Iaccarino family of Sant'Agata sui Due Golfi opened their Toronto outpost at the Westin Harbour Castle and won a Michelin star within two years. By their own claim, the best Italian restaurant outside Italy — and they may be right.

Edulis — Toronto
5
First Date
Toronto — Wine-Bar Tasting

Edulis

Wine-Bar Tasting $$$$

The husband-wife project that operates with no signage on the door, a chalkboard menu, and the most disciplined natural-wine programme in Canada — truffle dinners in fall, summer crawfish boils, and a fan base that has booked the room for 14 years.

Quetzal — Toronto
6
First Date
Toronto — Modern Mexican Wood-Fire

Quetzal

Modern Mexican Wood-Fire $$$

Open-fire Mexican cooking from the chef who put Mexico's contemporary kitchens on the international map. Bathurst Avenue's most ambitious dining room since Buca closed, with a pulque programme to match.

Canoe — Toronto
7
Close a Deal
Toronto — Modern Canadian

Canoe

Modern Canadian $$$$

TD Bank Tower's top-floor view dining room since 1995 — a relentlessly Canadian menu (Pacific salmon, Quebec foie gras, prairie bison) and a view that does the room's work for it.

Cafe Boulud Toronto — Toronto
8
Close a Deal
Toronto — French Brasserie

Cafe Boulud Toronto

French Brasserie $$$$

Daniel Boulud's Four Seasons Toronto brasserie since 2012 — the corporate-core French address and the most reliable Yorkville-fringe deal dinner.

Buca Yorkville — Toronto
9
First Date
Toronto — Italian Cellar

Buca Yorkville

Italian Cellar $$$

The 90-seat downstairs Italian cellar — cured-fish programme, brick-fired pizza, and the most disciplined seasonal pasta menu in Yorkville since the original King West Buca.

The Chase — Toronto
10
Birthday
Toronto — Seafood / Rooftop

The Chase

Seafood / Rooftop $$$$

King Street's rooftop seafood room — raw bar, plateaux de fruits de mer, and the most theatrical view dining in the financial-district fringe since Canoe.

The Top Ten in Toronto

Ranked against a single question: if you had one night in Toronto, where would you go?

1

Sushi Masaki Saito

Edomae Omakase $$$$ Yorkville

Canada's only two-Michelin-star restaurant. Masaki Saito left a New York three-star to build a 10-seat omakase counter in a Yorkville Victorian — the most disciplined sushi room in the country.

View →
2

Alo

Modern French Tasting $$$$ Queen West — Spadina

Patrick Kriss's third-floor blind tasting room above Queen West. The most disciplined modern fine-dining kitchen in Canada and Toronto's most reliable splurge.

View →
3

Aburi Hana

Modern Japanese Kaiseki $$$$ Yorkville

Modern kaiseki on Yorkville's quietest stretch — 18-course tasting, hinoki-and-stone room, and a chef's counter that runs the most architecturally precise Japanese kitchen in Canada outside the two-star.

View →
4

Don Alfonso 1890

Italian Fine Dining $$$$ Harbourfront — The Westin

The Iaccarino family of Sant'Agata sui Due Golfi opened their Toronto outpost at the Westin Harbour Castle and won a Michelin star within two years. By their own claim, the best Italian restaurant outside Italy — and they may be right.

View →
5

Edulis

Wine-Bar Tasting $$$$ King West — Niagara

The husband-wife project that operates with no signage on the door, a chalkboard menu, and the most disciplined natural-wine programme in Canada — truffle dinners in fall, summer crawfish boils, and a fan base that has booked the room for 14 years.

View →
6

Quetzal

Modern Mexican Wood-Fire $$$ Little Italy — College & Bathurst

Open-fire Mexican cooking from the chef who put Mexico's contemporary kitchens on the international map. Bathurst Avenue's most ambitious dining room since Buca closed, with a pulque programme to match.

View →
7

Canoe

Modern Canadian $$$$ Financial District

TD Bank Tower's top-floor view dining room since 1995 — a relentlessly Canadian menu (Pacific salmon, Quebec foie gras, prairie bison) and a view that does the room's work for it.

View →
8

Cafe Boulud Toronto

French Brasserie $$$$ Yorkville

Daniel Boulud's Four Seasons Toronto brasserie since 2012 — the corporate-core French address and the most reliable Yorkville-fringe deal dinner.

View →
9

Buca Yorkville

Italian Cellar $$$ Yorkville

The 90-seat downstairs Italian cellar — cured-fish programme, brick-fired pizza, and the most disciplined seasonal pasta menu in Yorkville since the original King West Buca.

View →
10

The Chase

Seafood / Rooftop $$$$ Financial District — King St

King Street's rooftop seafood room — raw bar, plateaux de fruits de mer, and the most theatrical view dining in the financial-district fringe since Canoe.

View →

The Toronto Dining Guide

Toronto runs the most architecturally diverse fine-dining scene in Canada. The Michelin Guide arrived in 2022, the city's first restaurant earned two stars in 2023 (Sushi Masaki Saito), and the editorial map has stretched accordingly — from the long-established Yorkville hotel rooms to the chef-driven cellar projects of King West, Ossington and Little Portugal. The pantry is genuinely global, the wine programmes are deeper than the city's reputation suggests, and the booking windows for the rooms that matter run two to six weeks ahead even on a Tuesday.

The pantry leans Ontario-led at the top end — Lake Erie pickerel, Cookstown produce, Niagara fruit, Prince Edward County wine — joined by a serious Pacific salmon and Atlantic shellfish flow that the city's Japanese rooms in particular have built reputations on. Italian is the strongest single category by depth, with rooms ranging from old-Yorkville to Calabrian cellar to two-Michelin-starred Westin. Coffee is third-wave; cocktails are New York-classical with a stronger Negroni programme than New York usually permits; and the wine programmes increasingly show Canadian pinot, riesling and chardonnay alongside the standard Old World benches.

Neighbourhoods

Yorkville carries the hotel and luxury rooms (Sushi Masaki Saito, Aburi Hana, Cafe Boulud, Don Alfonso). King West runs the chef-driven cellar projects and the rooftop seafood (Alo, Quetzal, The Chase). Ossington and Little Portugal hold the natural-wine and tasting-menu rooms (Edulis). Liberty Village and the Distillery District carry the casual splurge.

Reservations & Practical Notes

Reservations: the splurge tier (Sushi Masaki Saito, Alo, Aburi Hana) needs 4-8 weeks; mid-tier 1-3 weeks; casual rooms walk-in early evening. Dress is smart-casual to business-casual — a jacket reads correctly almost everywhere. Tipping is 18-20%. Most kitchens close at 10:30pm Tue-Thu, 11:30pm Fri-Sat. The TTC subway runs north-south on Yonge and Spadina, east-west on Bloor and King; cabs and Ubers are the more reliable option after 11pm.

For deeper editorial coverage, see our Editorial column — including pieces on Impress Clients, First Date and Proposal dining.