Scotiabank Arena Guide: What to Know Before You Go
Plan your visit to Scotiabank Arena with tips on transit, parking, entry, and timing so you can get there easily and avoid delays.
Plan your visit to Scotiabank Arena with tips on transit, parking, entry, and timing so you can get there easily and avoid delays.
Plan your visit to Sankofa Square with key details on location, transit access, and what to expect at this busy downtown Toronto corner.
Plan your visit to the CN Tower with hours, ticket details, and practical tips for Toronto’s most visited landmark.
Plan your visit to BMO Field with details on getting there, seating, and what to expect, including World Cup changes and parking limits.
Learn what to know about The FIFA World Cup 2026 in Toronto, including BMO Field, transit access, and the no-parking rule near the stadium.
Learn the key facts about Toronto for visitors, from record 2025 tourism to transit tips, so you can plan a smoother city trip.
The sharpest Toronto geography facts start with 307 km of rivers and creeks hiding inside a city most visitors reduce to a lakefront skyline. That’s the first mistake. Toronto isn’t flat, simple, or neatly pinned to Lake Ontario. It slopes, drains, breaks, and bends around ravines that still mess with street grids and walking routes. … Read more
Toronto economy facts get real fast when one city produces 20% of Canada’s GDP, then asks workers to squeeze onto Line 1 and pay rent on wages that don’t always keep up. That’s the Toronto contradiction. The City of Toronto counted a record 1,623,720 jobs in 2025, yet household stress is still part of the … Read more
Toronto history facts get weird fast: the city’s official origin sits inside a land deal for 250,830 acres that stayed disputed into the 21st century. That’s not a footnote. It’s the ground under the subway, the streetcar tracks, the condo cranes. The neighbourhood borders people argue about now. On March 6, 1834, York became Toronto. … Read more
Toronto population facts got weird fast: the wider region added 269,143 people in 2023-24, then was basically flat one year later. By July 1, 2025, Statistics Canada put the city itself at about 3.27 million. The regional story is messier. Immigration still added people. Births still outnumbered deaths. But non-permanent resident numbers fell, and more … Read more