
Living in Yorkville
Toronto
Discover Yorkville — Toronto's most upscale neighbourhood, home to designer shopping, fine dining, and luxury residences. Your guide to sophisticated living in the heart of midtown.
What Is It Like to Live in Yorkville?
Yorkville is Toronto's premier luxury neighbourhood — a polished enclave of designer boutiques, five-star hotels, art galleries, and high-end residences nestled between Bloor Street and Davenport Road in the heart of midtown. As of early 2026, it stands as the city's answer to Manhattan's Upper East Side or London's Mayfair.
The neighbourhood has an interesting duality. Bloor Street between Avenue Road and Yonge Street forms Toronto's most exclusive shopping corridor, home to Chanel, Louis Vuitton, Tiffany, and Holt Renfrew. But step onto the quieter side streets — Cumberland, Yorkville Avenue, Hazelton Avenue — and you find tree-lined lanes with Victorian townhouses, independent galleries, and intimate restaurants. The Royal Ontario Museum and Royal Conservatory of Music anchor the cultural landscape. Yorkville's transformation from a 1960s bohemian village (where Joni Mitchell and Neil Young once played coffee houses) into Toronto's most exclusive and prestigious address is one of the city's great urban evolution stories.
Who Lives in Yorkville?
Yorkville attracts Toronto's most affluent residents along with international buyers seeking a prestigious address. The community includes established professionals, executives, downsizers from Rosedale and Forest Hill, and a significant international contingent drawn by the neighbourhood's global reputation.
Yorkville's community is polished, cosmopolitan, and culturally engaged. Residents tend to be active supporters of the ROM, AGO, and Toronto's cultural institutions. The neighbourhood's social scene revolves around gallery openings, restaurant culture, and the annual Toronto International Film Festival, which uses Yorkville as its de facto headquarters.
What Does Housing Cost in Yorkville?
Yorkville is Toronto's most expensive neighbourhood for residential real estate as of early 2026. Luxury condos in buildings like the Four Seasons Private Residences, One Bloor, and The Yorkville range from $1 million CAD for a one-bedroom to well over $10 million CAD for penthouse units. Victorian and Edwardian townhouses on streets like Hazelton Avenue and Berryman Street, when they rarely come to market, can exceed $5 million CAD. Rental rates in Yorkville are the highest in the city — luxury one-bedrooms start around $3,000 CAD per month, with two-bedrooms ranging from $4,500 to $7,000 CAD. The buyer and renter profile is distinctly high-net-worth.
How Are the Schools Near Yorkville?
Yorkville itself is primarily a commercial and luxury residential area, but it sits adjacent to some of Toronto's most prestigious schools. The neighbourhood's central location provides easy access to both public and independent options across midtown.
Jesse Ketchum Junior and Senior Public School
Well-regarded public school on Davenport, walking distance from Yorkville
University of Toronto Schools (UTS)
Canada's premier secondary school, a short walk south
Branksome Hall
Prestigious independent girls school near Rosedale
Upper Canada College
Elite independent boys school in nearby Forest Hill since 1829
Where Are the Best Places to Eat in Yorkville?
Yorkville's dining scene is Toronto's most refined, with a concentration of fine dining, celebrity chef restaurants, and elegant patios that caters to the neighbourhood's upscale clientele. The side streets off Bloor — Cumberland, Yorkville Avenue, and Hazelton — harbour some of the city's most memorable dining experiences.
Sassafraz
French-CanadianToronto institution on Yorkville Avenue with a legendary patio, creative French-inspired cuisine, and TIFF celebrity sightings
STK Toronto
SteakhouseHigh-energy steakhouse in the W Hotel with dramatic decor and a social dining atmosphere
Sotto Sotto
ItalianRomantic subterranean Italian restaurant on Avenue Road — a favourite for special occasions
Cafe Boulud
FrenchDaniel Boulud's Toronto outpost in the Four Seasons Hotel, serving elegant French-American cuisine
Planta Yorkville
Plant-BasedUpscale plant-based restaurant from chef David Lee with inventive vegan dishes in a chic setting
NAO Steakhouse
Japanese-SteakhouseJapanese-influenced steakhouse on Yorkville Avenue known for A5 wagyu and omakase experiences
What Parks and Green Spaces Are in Yorkville?
Yorkville's green spaces are intimate and curated, befitting the neighbourhood's character. Yorkville Park (also known as the Village of Yorkville Park) is an award-winning urban park on Cumberland Street featuring a massive Canadian Shield granite rock, ornamental gardens, and a series of themed landscape rooms. Jesse Ketchum Park on Davenport Road provides a neighbourhood playground and open space. The true green space advantage of living in Yorkville is the proximity to Ramsden Park to the north and the expansive Rosedale Ravine system, which offers forested trails and a surprising sense of wilderness minutes from Bloor Street.
How Is the Commute from Yorkville?
Yorkville has arguably the best transit access of any neighbourhood in Toronto. The intersection of Bloor and Yonge — the city's most important transit hub — sits at the neighbourhood's eastern edge, providing connections to both major subway lines.
Who Is Yorkville Best For?
Yorkville is designed for a specific lifestyle — one that prioritises elegance, convenience, and cultural sophistication. It is Toronto's most polished neighbourhood and prices reflect that exclusivity.
Frequently Asked Questions About Yorkville
Yorkville is Toronto's premier luxury neighbourhood as of early 2026. For those who can afford it, it offers unmatched walkability, cultural institutions, fine dining, and transit access. The Walk Score of 98 makes car ownership entirely optional. The main barrier is cost.
Luxury one-bedroom condos in Yorkville start around $800,000 to $1 million CAD as of early 2026. Two-bedroom units range from $1.2 million to $3 million CAD. Penthouse suites in buildings like One Bloor and The Four Seasons can exceed $10 million CAD.
While Bloor Street's luxury retail corridor is Yorkville's most visible feature, the neighbourhood has a significant residential community. Side streets like Hazelton and Cumberland offer a quieter, more residential character with townhouses, galleries, and intimate restaurants.
The Toronto International Film Festival transforms Yorkville every September. Celebrity sightings are common on Yorkville Avenue and Cumberland Street. Restaurants and hotels fill up weeks in advance. TIFF Bell Lightbox screenings, premieres, and parties make the neighbourhood the festival's social epicentre.
Yorkville is urban, commercial, and condo-oriented with luxury shopping and dining at your doorstep. Rosedale is a quiet, leafy, residential neighbourhood of detached heritage homes. Yorkville suits those who want an urban luxury lifestyle; Rosedale suits families seeking space and tranquillity.
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