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Toronto Weather News

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24 neighbourhoods
YorkvilleUpscale downtown district known for boutique shopping and galleriesThe BeachesLakeside neighbourhood with boardwalk and sandy beachKensington MarketBohemian market district famous for vintage shops and food stallsLiberty VillageConverted industrial district popular with young professionalsLeslievilleTrendy east-end neighbourhood of cafes and renovated homesNorth YorkMajor midtown-north commercial and residential centreScarboroughEastern district known for the Scarborough BluffsEtobicokeWestern district bordering Lake Ontario and the Humber RiverHarbourfrontWaterfront precinct with parks and the ferry terminalDistillery DistrictPedestrian-only historic district of Victorian industrial architectureRosedaleLeafy affluent neighbourhood with historic mansionsCabbagetownHeritage district with one of North America's largest Victorian housing stocksThe AnnexUniversity-area neighbourhood of historic homes and bookshopsHigh ParkGreen west-end neighbourhood anchored by Toronto's largest parkRiverdaleEast-end residential area overlooking the Don ValleyYonge and EglintonMidtown hub of condos, shops and the new Crosstown LRTThe JunctionFormer railway hub now known for antiques and craft breweriesBloor West VillageTree-lined shopping strip with a European village feelDanforth (Greektown)Lively strip of Greek restaurants and patios along the DanforthLittle ItalyCollege Street strip of Italian cafes, bars and restaurantsChinatownDowntown district of markets, bakeries and dim sum restaurantsFinancial DistrictDowntown core of skyscrapers and Canada's major banksEntertainment DistrictDowntown precinct of theatres, arenas and nightlifeCorso ItaliaSt Clair West strip celebrating Toronto's Italian heritage

Weather

Toronto Weather Today

Live rain radar, current conditions, an hour-by-hour outlook and a seven-day forecast for Toronto, with original local weather writing.

Today's briefing

Toronto is warming up nicely this morning at 25 degrees, though the humidity will make it feel closer to 27, with a high of just 26 degrees and virtually no chance of rain today. The UV index is sitting at a high 7, so sunscreen is definitely worth slathering on if you're spending time outdoors, and those light layers will help you manage the warmth whilst the 18 kilometre per hour wind keeps things from feeling too muggy. Pull on your favourite t-shirt and shorts, but don't leave home without a light jumper since the evening will cool to around 20 degrees. The weekend is looking equally pleasant with Saturday reaching 25 degrees and Sunday warming to 26, both days keeping the rain chances well under 10 percent, so you've got a cracker of a few days ahead.

22°

Partly cloudy · feels like 22°

Today
31° / 20°
Humidity
58%
Wind
12 km/h NW
UV index
0 · Low

Next 24 hours

  1. Now

    22°

    0%

  2. 7am

    22°

    0%

  3. 8am

    21°

    0%

  4. 9am

    21°

    0%

  5. 10am

    20°

    0%

  6. 11am

    21°

    0%

  7. 12pm

    22°

    0%

  8. 1pm

    24°

    0%

  9. 2pm

    26°

    0%

  10. 3pm

    28°

    0%

  11. 4pm

    30°

    0%

  12. 5pm

    31°

    0%

  13. 6pm

    31°

    0%

  14. 7pm

    31°

    0%

  15. 8pm

    31°

    0%

  16. 9pm

    31°

    0%

  17. 10pm

    30°

    0%

  18. 11pm

    29°

    0%

  19. 12am

    28°

    0%

  20. 1am

    26°

    0%

  21. 2am

    26°

    0%

  22. 3am

    25°

    0%

  23. 4am

    24°

    0%

  24. 5am

    23°

    0%

Live rain radar

Drag to pan

Animated rain radar via RainViewer (Environment Canada sources). Full ECCC radar loop.

Seven-day forecast

  1. Wed

    Mainly clear

    31° 20°

    Rain 0%

  2. Thu

    Partly cloudy

    28° 20°

    Rain 0%

  3. Fri

    Showers

    29° 21°

    Rain 0%

  4. Sat

    Clear

    26° 19°

    Rain 0%

  5. Sun

    Partly cloudy

    25° 17°

    Rain 0%

  6. Mon

    Rain

    25° 21°

    Rain 0%

  7. Tue

    Mainly clear

    24° 20°

    Rain 0%

Sun and moon

New moon

2% lit

From the weather desk

Toronto weather, explained

How to read the Toronto forecast

A good forecast is really three views at once. The current panel tells you what it feels like outside right now, which matters most in a city where wind off Lake Ontario can make a mild-looking number feel much colder. The hourly strip is for planning the rest of your day: when a squall might roll through, when the wind eases, when it is warm enough to sit on a patio. The seven-day outlook is for the week ahead, and in Toronto it is most reliable for the first three or four days — after that, systems crossing the Great Lakes can still shift track. Read it top to bottom and you will almost always have what you need to plan around the city's four distinct seasons.

Toronto weather and the Great Lakes

Toronto's weather is shaped by its position on the north shore of Lake Ontario, part of a humid continental climate that swings between genuinely cold winters and warm, humid summers. The lake moderates temperatures near the waterfront, keeping spring cooler and autumn milder downtown than in the inland suburbs, and it fuels lake-effect snow squalls when cold air sweeps across the open water in late autumn and early winter. Winds off the lake also shape the city's notorious wind chill: a still, sunny -5°C day downtown can feel far colder along the waterfront when the lake breeze picks up.

What to expect from a Toronto winter

Toronto winters run roughly from late November to March, with average daytime highs hovering around freezing and overnight lows regularly dropping well below it. Snowfall is often erratic rather than constant — long dry cold snaps punctuated by sudden lake-effect squalls that can dump several centimetres in an afternoon. Wind chill is the number that matters most for safety: at -25°C wind chill or below, exposed skin can experience frostbite within minutes, which is why the hourly forecast here always surfaces both the air temperature and how it actually feels.

The best time to visit Toronto

Late June through September is the most reliable stretch for warm, dry days, with average highs in the mid-20s and long daylight hours that suit the waterfront, the Toronto Islands and the city's many outdoor festivals. September and early October bring a second sweet spot: cooler, crisper air, fewer crowds and some of the best fall colour in Ontario along the ravines and ferry rides to the islands. Spring (April to May) is changeable and often wet, with temperatures swinging widely week to week, while winter (December to March) suits visitors who want skating rinks, holiday markets and snow rather than sunshine. For a full month-by-month breakdown, see our guide to the best time to visit Toronto.

Read the month-by-month guide

Toronto's historic weather extremes

Toronto's official record high is 40.6°C, set during the brutal heat wave of July 1936, one of the deadliest in Canadian history. At the other end, the coldest recorded temperature in the city sits around -32.8°C. The most infamous single event remains the January 1999 snowstorm, when repeated system after system dumped over 100cm of snow in a matter of days, prompting the mayor to call in the Canadian Armed Forces to help clear the city — a decision that became a lasting piece of local folklore. Lake-effect squalls off Lake Ontario still occasionally produce whiteout conditions in the city's east end even when downtown stays clear.

For the stories behind the forecast — from storm warnings to seasonal event guides — the latest from Daily Toronto covers what the weather means for the city day to day. Planning a trip around the forecast? Daily Toronto's city news desk also tracks closures, festivals and transit impacts when conditions turn.

Weather data by Open-Meteo. Toronto Weather News is independent and not affiliated with any government weather agency.