Skip to content
Departly.
Toronto, Canada
Toronto

Ontario

Toronto

Stay beyond the CN Tower district, take the UP Express in over a taxi, build in a Niagara day, and budget for the tax and tips that land on every Toronto bill.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 9 Jun 2026

Best length

3-4 nights (or longer with Niagara)

Airport

Toronto Pearson (YYZ), ~22km northwest of downtown

Airport to centre

UP Express train ~25 min to Union Station, ~ยฃ7

Best base

Downtown for first-timers; West Queen West for a local feel

In short

Toronto at a glance

Toronto is best as a 3- or 4-night city break that doubles as your Canada arrival point: stay downtown or in West Queen West, take the UP Express train from Pearson rather than a taxi, do the CN Tower and Islands ferry for the skyline, and ringfence one full day for Niagara Falls. Budget in pounds and remember the shelf price is never the final price โ€” sales tax and a 15-20% tip land on top.

The short version

  • Stay downtown for everything-walkable, or West Queen West and Kensington for where Torontonians actually eat and drink.
  • Take the UP Express from Pearson to Union Station (~25 min, ~ยฃ7) instead of a ~ยฃ40 taxi โ€” it is the single easiest arrival call.
  • Do the CN Tower and the Toronto Islands ferry on the same clear day; the islands give the better skyline photo and cost a fraction of the tower.
  • Ringfence one full day for Niagara Falls (~1h30 each way) and only pay for the Hornblower boat, not the Clifton Hill arcades.
  • Three full days covers the tower, the islands, the St Lawrence Market and Kensington, plus a Niagara day; four nights is more comfortable.

Toronto is the long-haul city break that feels reassuringly easy for a first trip: an ~8-hour nonstop from London, English-speaking, card-first, and laid out on a tidy grid you can mostly walk. The trap is treating it as a single headline sight โ€” people fixate on the CN Tower, queue for the EdgeWalk, and miss that the better skyline photo is free from the islands and the real city is in the markets and streetcar neighbourhoods. The job of a good first trip is to take the UP Express in rather than a taxi, base yourself where the evenings are good, and stop budgeting off the shelf price, because Ontarioโ€™s 13% tax and a 15-20% tip land on top of everything.

Three full days is the practical minimum: one for the tower and the islands, one for the St Lawrence Market and Kensington, and one full day given over to Niagara Falls about ninety minutes south. Four nights is more comfortable if you want a museum afternoon or a slower patio evening. Below, the structured planning โ€” where to stay, what to book, how to get in from Pearson, and a realistic budget in pounds โ€” picks up from here.

Plan your Toronto trip

Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.

Top things to do in Toronto

CN Tower

Book a timed CN Tower ticket online and pick a clear-day slot โ€” the whole point is the view, and on a hazy or low-cloud day you pay full price to see fog. The General Admission ticket gets you the LookOut level and the Glass Floor; the SkyPod add-on takes you another 33 storeys higher. Allow 1.5โ€“2 hours, go around sunset on a fine evening for the city-then-lit transition, and keep the EdgeWalk as a separate, expensive thrill rather than the default.

1.5โ€“2 hours $43

Ripley's Aquarium of Canada

Book a timed-entry ticket online before you go โ€” Ripley's sits right at the base of the CN Tower and the on-the-day queue can run 30-45 minutes on a wet afternoon or a school holiday, when an advance slot walks you straight in. The Dangerous Lagoon shark tunnel with its moving walkway is the centrepiece; the moon-jelly Planet Jellies gallery is the other thing people actually remember. Allow 1.5-2 hours, and aim for the first slot after opening or after about 19:00, because midday and weekend afternoons are the busiest by some margin.

1.5-2 hours $44

Where to stay first

The areas that make a first visit easier โ€” not an exhaustive directory.

Downtown / Entertainment District

ยฃยฃยฃ premium

Walkable to the CN Tower, the waterfront and the islands ferry, and on the subway, streetcar and UP Express line. The easiest first-timer base, though it is the priciest part of the city and quiet after the office crowd leaves.

Best for: First-timers who want everything walkable

Browse hotels Core, by Union Station

West Queen West

ยฃยฃ mid-range

Independent cafes, galleries, vintage shops and bars along the streetcar line โ€” where Torontonians actually spend an evening. Better value and more character than the tower district, at the cost of a 10-15 minute streetcar ride to the headline sights.

Best for: Food, bars and a local feel

Browse hotels 10-15 min by streetcar

Kensington Market / Chinatown

ยฃ value

The most multicultural pocket in the city, packed with cheap eats and market stalls. Atmospheric and central-ish, but noisier and patchier on hotels, so it suits short stays over a quiet base.

Best for: Food-led trips, budget eaters

Browse hotels Streetcar from downtown

The Annex / Yorkville

ยฃยฃ mid-range

Leafy, residential Annex around the university shades into upmarket Yorkville with its designer shops and pricier hotels. Calmer and greener than downtown; pick the Annex for value and Yorkville only if you want the polish.

Best for: Quieter stays, longer trips

Browse hotels Subway from downtown

Airport to city centre

Toronto airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
UP Express to Union Station ~25 min about CA$13 (~ยฃ7) single Easiest with luggage; runs every ~15 min
TTC subway Line 2 from Kipling (via bus) ~50-70 min about CA$3.35 (~ยฃ1.80) Cheapest but slow and with a change
Taxi or rideshare ~30-50 min with traffic usually CA$60-75 (~ยฃ32-40) Good for late arrivals or groups
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: May, June, September and early October are the sweet spot: warm enough for the islands and patio season, comfortable for walking, and lighter on the July-August crowds and prices. October adds the fall colour that peaks across Ontario.

High summer (July-August) is warm and lively with full patio and festival season, but the busiest and priciest, and the islands and Niagara get packed. Winter (December-March) is genuinely cold, with snow and short days, though Christmas markets and indoor museums hold up. Spring and autumn give the best balance of weather, value and crowds.

What it costs

UK return flights to Toronto run roughly ยฃ400-ยฃ700 from London (Air Canada, British Airways, WestJet fly the ~8-hour nonstop), dipping lower on cheap May and September dates and topping ยฃ800+ in the July-August peak. Manchester, Glasgow and Edinburgh have seasonal nonstops; off-peak you may connect through a hub.

Daily budget per person

Sample trip: A realistic 4-night mid-range Toronto break for one person is roughly ยฃ900-ยฃ1,200 before shopping: ยฃ400-ยฃ600 flights, ยฃ300-ยฃ450 hotel share, ยฃ140-ยฃ200 food and TTC fares, ~ยฃ15 UP Express both ways, and ยฃ80-ยฃ130 for the CN Tower, a Niagara day trip and the islands ferry. Remember the shelf and menu prices exclude sales tax and you tip 15-20% on top.

Two things catch UK visitors out in Toronto: Ontario adds 13% HST to the shelf or menu price, and restaurant tipping of 15-20% is expected, so a CA$100 meal really costs about CA$130. Card terminals prompt high suggested tips first, so check before you tap.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide

Airport transfers

Pre-book a transfervia Welcome Pickups

Stay connected

Get an eSIMvia Airalo

Trains & rail passes

Book railvia Trainline

Also in Canada

See the full Canada guide

Toronto FAQs

How many days do you need in Toronto?
Three full days is the practical first-timer minimum: one for the CN Tower and the islands, one for the St Lawrence Market, Kensington and Queen West, and one full day for a Niagara Falls trip. Four nights is more comfortable if you want a slower pace or a museum day.
Is Niagara Falls a realistic day trip from Toronto?
Yes. Niagara is about 1h30 each way, so it works as a long day trip or one overnight. The falls are free to view; pay only for the Hornblower boat if you want the soaked-to-the-skin angle, and skip the Clifton Hill arcade strip unless you are travelling with kids. Organised tours and the GO Train both run from downtown.
Do you need a car in Toronto?
No. A hire car is a liability for a city stay because parking is expensive and downtown traffic is slow, while the TTC subway and streetcars cover the sights on one contactless PRESTO tap. Take the UP Express in from Pearson, and only hire a car for a separate Ontario road trip beyond the city.

Ready to book?

Find hotels in Toronto

Go