
Toronto in October
Great time to visit
October showcases Toronto at its most beautiful with fall colors and comfortable crowds. Weather stays pleasant enough for walking tours, but you'll need that first real jacket of the season.
Weather
October delivers classic fall with 14°C highs and 6°C lows. You'll get those perfect crisp days with bright blue skies, plus the occasional warm afternoon that feels like bonus summer. Rain increases as storm systems roll through.
14°C high6°C low10 rain days
Crowds & Cost
moderate crowds
~$125/day average
Events & Festivals
- •Scotiabank Nuit Blanche
- •International Festival of Authors
- •Halloween celebrations
October Tips
- •Fall colors peak in mid-October - High Park and Toronto Islands become photo magnets
- •Layer up for temperature swings, especially if you're bar hopping in King West
- •Tourism drops after TIFF, so you'll find better hotel deals
All Months
May through October gives you Toronto at its best. The city shakes off winter's grip in May, with temperatures hitting 20°C and patios reopening across the city. This is when Torontonians remember how to smile again.
June and July bring festival season. The Toronto International Film Festival takes over the city in September, but summer brings Caribana (now called the Toronto Caribbean Carnival), Pride Month celebrations, and endless street festivals. Expect crowds and higher hotel prices, but the energy is infectious.
August gets humid – we're talking 30°C with humidity that makes it feel like 40°C. But this is prime time for the Toronto Islands, outdoor concerts at the Harbourfront Centre, and rooftop bars across King West.
September and October offer the sweet spot. Temperatures drop to a comfortable 15-20°C, fall colors hit High Park and the Don Valley, and you can actually get restaurant reservations again. TIFF brings celebrities and cinema lovers from around the world.
Winter (November through April) tests your resolve. January temperatures drop to -10°C, with wind chills that'll freeze your face off. But hotel rates plummet, you'll have museums to yourself, and there's something magical about skating at Nathan Phillips Square with the CN Tower looming overhead.
Avoid the last week of December through early January – everything shuts down, transit runs on reduced schedules, and even Torontonians flee to warmer places.
Toronto Scores
Solo
8/10
Couples
7/10
Families
9/10
Adventure
5/10
Budget
6/10
Luxury
7/10
BUILD YOUR TORONTO PLAN
Insider picks, smart timing, and a plan ready when you are.