Four Seasons Hotel Toronto
Daily price line
Upcoming nightly rates
Review
Character and identity
The brand's hometown flagship occupies a 55-storey glass tower in Yorkville, rebuilt in 2012 to replace the 1960s original and given a full guest-room overhaul in 2024. The 259 rooms (including 42 suites) lean bright and residential, with Canadian-made furniture, local artwork, and floor-to-ceiling windows. The lobby breaks into intimate lounge pockets beneath a dandelion sculpture. Café Boulud, Daniel Boulud's bistro, anchors the dining, with dbar and the seasonal dazur terrace alongside. The ninth-floor spa runs to 30,000 square feet with 19 treatment rooms, the largest urban spa in the Four Seasons portfolio. Service is warm, anticipatory, and Clefs d'Or-led.
Who's it for
Best for:
Four Seasons loyalists, design-minded couples, and corporate travellers who want a polished urban base steps from Bloor Street shopping, the ROM, and Yorkville dining. Families are well looked after with kids' welcome amenities, dedicated pool hours, and child-friendly room service. Spa-goers and TIFF visitors will feel particularly at home.
Should look elsewhere:
Travellers chasing a buzzy, scene-driven boutique or historic character won't find it here; the architecture and tone are discreet and corporate-residential rather than quirky. If you want walkable access to the waterfront or the Entertainment District, the Yorkville location is a cab ride away.
Bottom line
What you're paying for is the full Four Seasons machine operating at hometown pitch: anticipatory service, a serious spa, and a Boulud kitchen, all behind a calm Yorkville address. Spring for a suite or a high-floor room to make the most of the 2024 refresh and floor-to-ceiling views, and time a visit around TIFF if you want the hotel at its liveliest.