Lo que nadie te cuenta sobre Toronto: es la cuarta ciudad más grande de América del Norte, más grande que Chicago, y aun así la mayoría de los visitantes primerizos se mueven dentro de un radio de 3 kilómetros a pie. Por eso los hoteles de lujo de la ciudad están tan concentrados — cada propiedad de cinco estrellas que merece la reserva está entre la calle Bloor y el lago Ontario, con la Torre CN como referencia. Elige bien el barrio y raramente necesitarás un taxi.
Las atracciones que justifican el vuelo son menos en número de lo que sugieren los folletos, pero más grandes cuando estás delante de ellas. La Torre CN con 553 metros sigue siendo una de las estructuras independientes más altas del mundo — el EdgeWalk en el borde exterior es genuinamente aterrador y vale los C$225. Casa Loma es un castillo gótico revival completo en medio de una ciudad norteamericana, lo cual no tiene ningún sentido y es maravilloso. El Royal Ontario Museum esconde unas salas de dinosaurios excepcionales detrás de una fachada de cristal de Daniel Libeskind. Añade un partido de los Maple Leafs, los Raptors o los Blue Jays y tienes tu semana.
Para excursiones de un día, las cataratas del Niágara están a 90 minutos en coche o tren — ve en el barco Hornblower, sáltate la franja de arcade de Clifton Hill. Los barrios importan más que el código postal: Yorkville es tu base del Four Seasons en la calle Bloor con compras de lujo — boutique, arbolada, cara. El Financial District está comunicado por el subterráneo a través de la red PATH, perfecto si odias el tiempo invernal. El Entertainment District son teatros, el TIFF y energía nocturna. King West es la franja de diseño y restaurantes a la que salen los locales.
La gastronomía recompensa la curiosidad más que el presupuesto. La escena es de primer nivel porque la mitad de la población nació en el extranjero — Little Portugal, Koreatown, Greektown y Chinatown son barrios reales y accesibles a pie. Los menús de degustación serios (Alo, Edulis, Sushi Masaki Saito) rondan los C$200-400 por persona, pero la mejor historia es el dim sum a C$15, el pho a C$22 en Spadina, el pollo jerk a C$18 cerca de Eglinton West. Las bebidas castigan: un cóctel artesanal cuesta C$18-22. La propina es del 18-20% y no es opcional.
Realidad práctica: la mayoría de viajeros de la UE, UK, Australia y muchos países asiáticos necesitan una eTA (alrededor de C$7, solicitada online) y no un visado completo — verifica tu pasaporte específico. El aeropuerto Toronto Pearson (YYZ) está a 27 km al noroeste; el tren UP Express llega a Union Station en 25 minutos por C$12,35 — un Uber costará C$60-90 y fácilmente una hora en el tráfico. La ciudad es estadísticamente muy segura, aunque la zona alrededor de Dundas/Sherbourne se siente más dura de lo que es. Cuándo visitar: de mayo a octubre, siendo septiembre el mejor momento. El invierno es genuinamente frío — menos 15 con sensación térmica es normal en enero.
Elegimos diez hoteles de Toronto que realmente merecen su precio en 2026 — desde el buque insignia Four Seasons Hotel Toronto con el Café Boulud en la planta baja, pasando por iconos como el Ritz-Carlton, el Shangri-La y el St. Regis, hasta el histórico Fairmont Royal York y el todavía excelente Omni King Edward si buscas gran carácter a un precio más accesible.
Dónde alojarse — barrios
Lo que nadie te cuenta sobre Toronto: es la cuarta ciudad más grande de América del Norte, más grande que Chicago, y aun así la mayoría de los visitantes primerizos se mueven dentro de un radio de 3 kilómetros a pie. Por eso los hoteles de lujo de la ciudad están tan concentrados — cada propiedad de cinco estrellas que merece la reserva está entre la calle Bloor y el lago Ontario, con la Torre CN como referencia. Elige bien el barrio y raramente necesitarás un taxi.
Las atracciones que justifican el vuelo son menos en número de lo que sugieren los folletos, pero más grandes cuando estás delante de ellas. La Torre CN con 553 metros sigue siendo una de las estructuras independientes más altas del mundo — el EdgeWalk en el borde exterior es genuinamente aterrador y vale los C$225. Casa Loma es un castillo gótico revival completo en medio de una ciudad norteamericana, lo cual no tiene ningún sentido y es maravilloso. El Royal Ontario Museum esconde unas salas de dinosaurios excepcionales detrás de una fachada de cristal de Daniel Libeskind. Añade un partido de los Maple Leafs, los Raptors o los Blue Jays y tienes tu semana.
Para excursiones de un día, las cataratas del Niágara están a 90 minutos en coche o tren — ve en el barco Hornblower, sáltate la franja de arcade de Clifton Hill. Los barrios importan más que el código postal: Yorkville es tu base del Four Seasons en la calle Bloor con compras de lujo — boutique, arbolada, cara. El Financial District está comunicado por el subterráneo a través de la red PATH, perfecto si odias el tiempo invernal. El Entertainment District son teatros, el TIFF y energía nocturna. King West es la franja de diseño y restaurantes a la que salen los locales.
La gastronomía recompensa la curiosidad más que el presupuesto. La escena es de primer nivel porque la mitad de la población nació en el extranjero — Little Portugal, Koreatown, Greektown y Chinatown son barrios reales y accesibles a pie. Los menús de degustación serios (Alo, Edulis, Sushi Masaki Saito) rondan los C$200-400 por persona, pero la mejor historia es el dim sum a C$15, el pho a C$22 en Spadina, el pollo jerk a C$18 cerca de Eglinton West. Las bebidas castigan: un cóctel artesanal cuesta C$18-22. La propina es del 18-20% y no es opcional.
Realidad práctica: la mayoría de viajeros de la UE, UK, Australia y muchos países asiáticos necesitan una eTA (alrededor de C$7, solicitada online) y no un visado completo — verifica tu pasaporte específico. El aeropuerto Toronto Pearson (YYZ) está a 27 km al noroeste; el tren UP Express llega a Union Station en 25 minutos por C$12,35 — un Uber costará C$60-90 y fácilmente una hora en el tráfico. La ciudad es estadísticamente muy segura, aunque la zona alrededor de Dundas/Sherbourne se siente más dura de lo que es. Cuándo visitar: de mayo a octubre, siendo septiembre el mejor momento. El invierno es genuinamente frío — menos 15 con sensación térmica es normal en enero.
Elegimos diez hoteles de Toronto que realmente merecen su precio en 2026 — desde el buque insignia Four Seasons Hotel Toronto con el Café Boulud en la planta baja, pasando por iconos como el Ritz-Carlton, el Shangri-La y el St. Regis, hasta el histórico Fairmont Royal York y el todavía excelente Omni King Edward si buscas gran carácter a un precio más accesible.
Elegimos primero por ubicación y barrio, luego por puntuaciones reales de huéspedes en Agoda · Booking.com · Trip.com, características únicas y relación calidad-precio.
Reseñas · 10 mejores hoteles
Toca un estilo de viaje — la lista se reordena para mostrar la mejor opción primero.
No. 1 #1 Luxury · Four Seasons flagship in the heart of Yorkville ★9.2 Four Seasons Hotel Toronto
📍 Right in the heart of Yorkville, on Yorkville Avenue where it meets Bay Street — about a 5-7 minute walk to the brand-name boutiques on Bloor Street and the ROM museum, and roughly 4 minutes to Bay subway station on the green (Bloor-Danforth) line.
Picture a sleek 30-storey glass tower standing in the middle of Yorkville, Toronto's most upscale shopping district — that's the Four Seasons Hotel Toronto. This is more than just another luxury hotel: it's the hometown flagship of the Four Seasons, the chain that was actually founded in this city. The current building opened in 2012, replacing the old one and raising the bar across the board. All 259 rooms and suites are done in clean, modern tones with soft fabrics, polished marble, and floor-to-ceiling windows framing the city or Yorkville below. Dining runs through Café Boulud, chef Daniel Boulud's Forbes Five-Star room, plus the stylish d|bar that locals treat as a meeting spot. Up top sits a full-floor spa with an indoor pool and a glass-walled fitness room. Reviewers single out the polished Four Seasons service most of all. It scores 9.2/10 and suits couples, shoppers, and real luxury lovers.
- Four Seasons hometown flagship in the heart of luxury Yorkville
- Warm, polished Five-Star service that reviewers rave about
- Full-floor spa, indoor pool, and Café Boulud all under one roof
- The most expensive rates in town, with several add-on charges on top
- Modern design feels static to some — short on its own character
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No. 2 #2 Luxury · upscale tower in the heart of the Entertainment District ★9 The Ritz-Carlton, Toronto
📍 On Wellington Street West, on the edge of the Entertainment District and Financial District — about an 8 to 10 minute walk to the CN Tower and Rogers Centre, and roughly 4 minutes on foot to St. Andrew subway station on the Yellow line.
Picture a slim 53-storey glass tower casting its shadow over Wellington Street West, right where Toronto's Entertainment District meets the Financial District — that's The Ritz-Carlton, Toronto, which opened in 2011 and turned into a downtown luxury landmark almost overnight. What reviews talk about most is the room size: this is widely called one of the most spacious hotels in the city, done in warm wood, marble, and soft fabrics, with big windows that frame the skyline or Lake Ontario. On the food side there's the Italian restaurant TOCA, known for its in-house cheese cave, plus EPOCH Bar & Kitchen Terrace for cocktails. Up on the wellness floor sit the My Blend by Clarins spa and an indoor salt-water pool that guests find genuinely relaxing. The thing most people agree on is the Ritz-Carlton service — detail-obsessed, and they remember your name. You can walk to the CN Tower, Rogers Centre, and the main theatres with no trouble.
- Central spot on Wellington — walk to the CN Tower and the theatres
- Among the largest rooms in Toronto
- Clarins spa plus an indoor salt-water pool
- Pricing and extra fees sit at the very top of the city
- Sits in the business district, so some nights feel quiet
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No. 3 #3 luxury · Asian-style service in the Financial District ★9.1 Shangri-La Toronto
📍 On University Avenue where the Financial District meets the Entertainment District — about an 8-10 minute walk to the CN Tower and Roy Thomson Hall, with St. Andrew subway station (yellow line) roughly 5 minutes away.
Picture a slim glass tower running 65 storeys up over University Avenue in the heart of Toronto's Financial District — that's Shangri-La Toronto, the well-known Asian-chain hotel that opened in 2012 and takes the lower 17 floors of the building, with private residences stacked above. All 202 rooms and suites run wider than the downtown norm, dressed in warm tones with a quiet Asian touch and a few high-tech tricks: a TV built into the bathroom mirror, tablet room controls, a Nespresso machine, and floor-to-ceiling windows that frame the nearby CN Tower from many rooms. On the food side there's the good-looking Bosk restaurant, The Lobby Lounge (a local favourite for afternoon tea), a Prohibition-era bar, and the standout link straight into Momofuku by chef David Chang. The fifth floor is the full leisure zone — the Miraj Hammam spa, a 20-metre indoor pool, and a fitness studio. Best suited to couples, business travellers, and anyone after warm service downtown.
- Warm, attentive Asian-style service that reviewers praise almost unanimously
- Miraj Hammam spa plus a 20-metre indoor pool
- Direct link to Momofuku, Bosk and a Prohibition-era bar
- High rates and steep extras, especially valet parking
- Financial District location goes quiet on weekends
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No. 4 #4 Luxury · sky-high hotel in the heart of the Financial District ★8.9 The St. Regis Toronto
📍 On Bay Street in the heart of the Financial District (corner of Bay and Adelaide) — about a 4-6 minute walk to the Queen and King subway stations, roughly 8 minutes to the Eaton Centre, and about 15 minutes to the Lake Ontario waterfront and the CN Tower.
Picture a sleek glass tower of 65 floors rising over Toronto's Financial District on Bay Street — the second-tallest building in the city and in Canada. It opened in 2012 as the Trump Tower before becoming The St. Regis Toronto in 2018. The thing every review agrees on is the view: all 261 rooms start on the high floors, so you wake up to the skyline, the top of the CN Tower, and Lake Ontario filling floor-to-ceiling glass. The heart of the place is Louix Louis, a contemporary French restaurant on floor 31 with a two-storey grand bar showing off more than 500 spirits — one of the largest collections in North America. Next door, Astor Lounge runs a champagne sabering at 6 PM plus afternoon tea, and one floor up sit the St. Regis Spa and an infinity saltwater pool on floor 32. Add 24-hour butler service and an overall 8.9/10, and it suits couples, business travelers, and anyone who wants to sleep above the city.
- City and lake views from the second-tallest tower
- Louix Louis two-storey bar · 500+ spirits
- Infinity saltwater pool + 24-hour butler
- Highest prices and extra fees in the city
- Financial District goes very quiet on weekends
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No. 5 #5 Local boutique · Heart of Yorkville ★9 The Hazelton Hotel
📍 Right in the heart of Yorkville on Yorkville Avenue, with luxury shopping you can wander all day; Bay subway station (Line 2) is about a 4-minute walk and the Royal Ontario Museum is a few minutes on foot.
Picture a boutique hotel planted in the heart of Yorkville, Toronto's most upscale fashion and arts district, where you step out the door into a row of designer boutiques and galleries. That's The Hazelton Hotel, the independent luxury property that opened in 2008 and is widely called the city's first true luxury hotel. The draw is that it answers to no global chain, yet it still pulls down a Forbes Five-Star rating and 2 MICHELIN Keys. The interiors come from renowned studio Yabu Pushelberg and lean into 1940s Hollywood glamour with marble, leather and warm gold detailing. All 62 rooms and 15 suites average more than 600 square feet with 9-foot ceilings, and many have French doors opening onto a private balcony. There's ONE Restaurant by chef Mark McEwan, a Valmont spa, an indoor salt-water pool and a private cinema for guests. What every review agrees on is the warm, name-remembering service. Overall 9.0/10, best for couples and luxury lovers who want a warm boutique feel in a high-end neighbourhood.
- Heart-of-Yorkville location, luxury shopping all day on foot
- Very large rooms with private balconies and glam design
- Warm, name-remembering service that reviews praise unanimously
- Top-of-the-city pricing plus a per-night facility fee
- Some rooms have weak soundproofing, with hallway noise
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No. 6 #6 luxury landmark · heart of Yorkville ★9 Park Hyatt Toronto
📍 Corner of Avenue Road and Bloor in the heart of Yorkville — about a 4-minute walk to Bay subway station, with the Royal Ontario Museum directly across the street.
Park Hyatt Toronto is more than a smart luxury hotel — it is a landmark that has stood at the corner of Avenue Road and Bloor since 1936, the gateway to Yorkville, Toronto's most upscale shopping district. For decades the old building drew writers, opera singers and politicians, then it closed for a 4-year restoration and reopened, top to bottom, in September 2021 under architects KPMB and interior designer Studio Munge, who kept the original Art Deco feel but made everything fresh. The most talked-about feature is the Writers Room rooftop bar on the 17th floor, where Margaret Atwood and Mordecai Richler used to drink and write, with wide views over the city and Queen's Park. The 8,000 sq ft Stillwater Spa with 13 treatment rooms earns its own praise, and the Royal Ontario Museum sits directly across the street. It rates 9.0/10, best for couples and luxury travelers who fall for story and a central location over a resort with a pool.
- Upscale Yorkville location, walk to shops and the museum
- Writers Room rooftop bar steeped in literary history
- Rooms fully restored in 2021, fresh and roomy
- No swimming pool
- High rates, and some corridors still feel older than the price
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No. 7 #7 Green luxury · in the heart of King West ★8.8 1 Hotel Toronto
📍 Right in the middle of King West Village on Wellington Street West — you can spend a whole evening wandering the city's hippest run of restaurants, bars, and galleries on foot. The 504 King streetcar at Bathurst is about a 3-minute walk.
Picture a luxury hotel where stepping inside feels like walking into an indoor garden — warm reclaimed-wood walls, greenery trailing from every floor, and a leafy, natural calm over the whole lobby. That's 1 Hotel Toronto, the American eco-luxury brand's first Canadian outpost, which opened in 2021 inside the former Thompson Hotel in King West, a neighbourhood Travel + Leisure called the coolest in Canada. What sets it apart is sustainability you can actually touch, far beyond marketing copy: the table wood comes from trees felled in the 2013 ice storm, and the in-room water glasses are made from recycled wine bottles. The whole place was designed by New York's Rockwell Group. All 112 rooms get floor-to-ceiling windows, 100% organic linens, yoga mats, and Bamford bath products. The rooftop has a seasonal pool with city views, plus 1 Kitchen for local-ingredient food and the stylish Flora Lounge. Reviews agree the mood is warm and the staff attentive. Overall 8.8/10, best for couples and luxury travelers who want a hotel with soul in a chic neighbourhood.
- Eco design with real soul, greenery through the whole lobby
- Heart-of-King-West location, the city's hippest neighbourhood
- Rooftop pool with city views + sustainable dining
- Rooftop pool is seasonal, closed in winter
- Valet parking runs about $63 a night
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No. 8 #8 Luxury · design boutique in the Entertainment District ★9 BISHA, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Toronto
📍 On Blue Jays Way in the heart of the Entertainment District — about a 3-minute walk to Rogers Centre, roughly 7 minutes to the CN Tower and Ripley's Aquarium, and 7-9 minutes to St. Andrew and Osgoode subway stations, with the bars and restaurants of King West right next door.
Picture a boutique hotel that paints its entire tower a glossy black, then opens onto a dim brass-and-mirror lobby hung with cool art — that's BISHA, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Toronto, a 96-room stay on Blue Jays Way in the heart of the Entertainment District. It opened in 2016 under Canadian designer Alessandro Munge of Studio Munge, who wanted it to feel like walking into a rock star's mansion rather than a chain hotel. The most talked-about feature is the entire 9th floor, designed by legendary musician Lenny Kravitz and Kravitz Design, with vinyl records and rock-and-roll detailing. At the top of the 44-storey building sits KOST, serving food inspired by Mexico's Baja peninsula with full skyline and CN Tower views, plus a rooftop infinity pool. Downstairs there's the Japanese restaurant Akira Back and the Mister C lobby bar. It joined Marriott's Luxury Collection in 2019 and rates 9.0/10.
- Bold boutique design with a floor by Lenny Kravitz
- Rooftop infinity pool + KOST on floor 44 with skyline views
- Central spot — 3 minutes' walk to Rogers Centre
- Rooms run compact for the price
- Busy district gets noisy some weekend nights
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No. 9 #9 Landmark · 1929 Château building ★8.7 Fairmont Royal York
📍 Heart of the Financial District on Front Street West — directly across from Union Station, a 2-minute walk over the road, and about 8 minutes on foot to the CN Tower.
Picture a brown sandstone tower shaped like a French château rising over Toronto's Financial District — that's the Fairmont Royal York, open since 1929 and once the tallest building in the entire British Empire. It was designed in the Châteauesque style by Canadian architects Ross and Macdonald, and it sits directly across from Union Station, the city's main rail hub — you just cross the street. The draws are a soaring gilded lobby, Library Bar (a legendary cocktail spot tucked into one corner of the building), the REIGN restaurant in the grand hall, and a rooftop apiary that was the first of its kind on any city hotel. Reviews agree on the unbeatable transit location and a classic atmosphere you won't find in newer builds. Overall 8.7/10 — best for travelers who love old buildings with a story and want to sit where getting anywhere is easy.
- Across from Union Station — subway, GO train and UP Express to the airport in a 2-minute walk
- 1929 Château building with a gilded lobby and real history
- Legendary Library Bar plus a rooftop apiary with 600,000+ bees
- Some room types (the standard Fairmont Room) run small and look dated
- A huge hotel of 1,300+ rooms — slow check-in queues when it's busy
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No. 10 #10 historic building · 1903 palace hotel ★9.1 The Omni King Edward Hotel
📍 37 King St East, in the heart of Old Toronto — about a 3-minute walk to King subway station (Line 1) and 7 minutes to St. Lawrence Market.
Picture a tall cream-stone building standing in the middle of Toronto's Financial District, holding its ground since 1903 — that's The Omni King Edward Hotel, which everyone here calls the "King Eddy". It was the city's first palace hotel, designed by two well-known architects: E.J. Lennox (the same man behind Old City Hall) and Henry Ives Cobb. The lobby opens with high ceilings, marble columns imported from Europe and glittering crystal chandeliers, and the guest list once ran from royalty all the way to The Beatles, who stayed in the royal suite in 1964. A roughly $40 million restoration brought it back to its old grandeur with modern comfort. You walk to King station (Line 1) in about 3 minutes and St. Lawrence Market in 7. Thousands of guest reviews land near 9.4/10; our score is 9.1/10.
- 1903 historic building with a classic feel you won't find elsewhere
- Central Old Toronto location, 3-minute walk to King station
- Spacious high-ceilinged rooms and warm service
- Old building — some rooms are small with hidden charges
- No swimming pool
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📊Comparativa · 10 hoteles
| # | Hotel | Estrellas | Puntuación | Desde / noche | Zona | Destacado |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Four Seasons Hotel Toronto | 5 | 9.2 | ~$529 | Bay subway station (green Bloor-Danforth line) is about a 4-minute walk; from there it is a quick ride into downtown or out to other neighbourhoods. | #1 Luxury · Four Seasons flagship in the heart of Yorkville |
| 2 | The Ritz-Carlton, Toronto | 5 | 9.0 | ~$471 | St. Andrew station on the Yellow line (Yonge–University), about a 4 minute walk. | #2 Luxury · upscale tower in the heart of the Entertainment District |
| 3 | Shangri-La Toronto | 5 | 9.1 | ~$300 | St. Andrew station (yellow Yonge-University line), about a 5-minute walk. | #3 luxury · Asian-style service in the Financial District |
| 4 | The St. Regis Toronto | 5 | 8.9 | ~$357 | Queen and King subway stations (yellow Yonge-University line), about a 4-6 minute walk. | #4 Luxury · sky-high hotel in the heart of the Financial District |
| 5 | The Hazelton Hotel | 5 | 9.0 | ~$360 | Bay subway station (Line 2, the green line), about a 4-minute walk. | #5 Local boutique · Heart of Yorkville |
| 6 | Park Hyatt Toronto | 5 | 9.0 | ~$406 | Bay subway station (Line 2) is about a 4-minute walk away. | #6 luxury landmark · heart of Yorkville |
| 7 | 1 Hotel Toronto | 5 | 8.8 | ~$254 | 504 King streetcar at Bathurst | #7 Green luxury · in the heart of King West |
| 8 | BISHA, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Toronto | 5 | 9.0 | ~$254 | St. Andrew and Osgoode stations (Yellow Yonge-University line), about a 7-9 minute walk. | #8 Luxury · design boutique in the Entertainment District |
| 9 | Fairmont Royal York | 5 | 8.7 | ~$320 | Union Station (rail / subway / UP Express to the airport) is a 2-minute walk across the street. | #9 Landmark · 1929 Château building |
| 10 | The Omni King Edward Hotel | 4 | 9.1 | ~$291 | King subway station (Line 1 Yonge) is about a 3-minute walk. | #10 historic building · 1903 palace hotel |
Cuál elegir — por estilo de viaje
#1 Four Seasons Hotel Toronto is a stay in the chain's hometown flagship right in Yorkville, the city's most upscale district, with a full-floor spa, an indoor pool, and service polished to a training-lab shine — strong on location, service, and genuine all-round luxury, traded against the steepest rates in town.
#2 The Ritz-Carlton, Toronto is a stay in an upscale tower between the theatre and business districts, with some of the largest rooms in the city, a My Blend by Clarins spa, an indoor salt-water pool, and Ritz-Carlton service that remembers your name — the draw is the walkable location, the room space, and how complete it feels, traded against pricing and extra fees that sit at the top of the city.
#3 Shangri-La Toronto is a stay in one of the Financial District's slimmest, tallest glass towers, with a city-grade hammam spa, a 20-metre indoor pool, and warm Asian service that reviewers rank number one — strongest on service, a complete leisure floor, and a location within walking distance of both the finance district and the theatres.
#4 The St. Regis Toronto is a night spent floating on the second-tallest tower in the city, with the Louix Louis restaurant on floor 31, a sky-high infinity saltwater pool, and St. Regis butler service that handles every detail — strong on top-tier city views and a central Financial District address, traded against the highest prices and extra fees in town and a district that quiets down on weekends.
#5 The Hazelton is the local hotel that sparked Toronto's whole luxury scene — big, glam rooms with private balconies, staff who remember your name, and a Yorkville address you can shop all day, leaning on warm boutique character rather than chain-scale size.
#6 Park Hyatt Toronto is a chance to sleep inside one of the city's legends, freshly restored top to bottom — strongest on its upscale Yorkville location, a rooftop bar woven into Canadian literary history, and a large spa, more than on having a pool (there isn't one).
Selección final
10 hoteles para todos los estilos y presupuestos — elige por barrio, características únicas y estilo de viaje.
Haz clic en cualquiera para leer la reseña completa y comparar precios en Agoda · Booking.com · Trip.com.