No Frills and Food Basics for cheap groceries
May 7, 2026Agincourt · Experience date Dec 7, 2025
No Frills is the cheapest mainstream supermarket in Toronto. Food Basics is similar. Avoid Loblaws and Metro for daily shopping — much pricier. T&T Supermarket in Agincourt for Asian groceries.
Dental care in Toronto — expensive without insurance
May 2, 2026North York · Experience date Dec 4, 2025
Dental care in Toronto is expensive without coverage. Basic check-up and cleaning: $250–400 CAD. Filling: $200–400. Root canal: $1,000–2,000. Dental insurance: most Toronto employers provide group dental coverage (usually covers 80% of basic, 50–80% of major). Without employer dental: buy individual dental insurance (Great-West Life, Manulife, Sun Life — $50–100/month). Canadian Dental Care Plan (federal): launched 2024 for uninsured Canadians with under $90,000 household income — may cover some costs, check canada.ca/dental. Dental schools: UofT and Western University dental schools offer lower-cost treatment ($50–150 for check-ups) — wait times are longer but quality is supervised. Book annual check-ups promptly after insurance kicks in.
Healthcare prescriptions without a doctor in Toronto
Apr 28, 2026Annex · Experience date Mar 12, 2026
Getting medications in Toronto without a family doctor: Ontario pharmacists (since 2023) can prescribe and/or continue medications for a range of minor conditions without a doctor referral. Conditions pharmacists can treat: UTIs, cold sores, mild skin conditions, stop-smoking support, some contraceptive prescriptions. Walk-in clinic prescriptions: most common route — visit any walk-in clinic (no appointment needed) for assessment and prescription. Virtual care: Maple, Teladoc, and Dialogue offer video doctor visits from $49 — prescriptions sent electronically to your pharmacy. OHIP covers: walk-in clinic visits. Does not cover: the prescription medication cost itself (unless covered by employer benefits or ODB — Ontario Drug Benefit program for eligible low-income residents). Bring your current medications with a letter from your home doctor — Toronto pharmacists can often bridge your supply.
Contributor: Anna Kowalski Toronto's underground PATH and winter walking
Apr 26, 2026Midtown · Experience date Dec 9, 2025
The PATH (pedestrian tunnel system, 30+ km) connects downtown Toronto's office towers, hotels, Union Station, and Eaton Centre underground. Essential for winter — access from street level down stairways or via office building lobbies. Navigation: PATH is notoriously confusing, with inconsistent signage. Download the 'PATH Toronto' app (free) or save the static map as a phone screenshot. Key user tip: memorise the Union Station connection to your office building in your first week — this is the most important PATH route for Bay Street workers. PATH extends: from Union Station east to St Lawrence Market and west to SkyDome (Rogers Centre) and CBC headquarters. PATH is heated, populated, and has coffee shops, restaurants, and convenience stores throughout.
Contributor: Maria Santos Groceries in Toronto — supermarkets compared
Apr 12, 2026Downtown · Experience date Apr 20, 2026
Major Toronto supermarkets: Loblaws (most widespread, good quality, PC Optimum loyalty points), No Frills (Loblaws discount chain, significantly cheaper, less range), FreshCo (budget, good produce), Metro (slightly premium, good prepared foods), Sobeys (similar to Metro), Farm Boy (organic/premium, good quality), T&T Supermarket (best Asian grocery in Canada, excellent selection of Asian products at competitive prices). Grocery spend for one person: $300–500 CAD/month cooking at home. PC Optimum card (Loblaws/No Frills): free, earns points, significant discounts. Food basics: cheapest in Toronto. Ethnic grocery markets: Kensington Market, Chinatown (Spadina), Greektown (Danforth) — fresh, cheap, excellent quality.
Contributor: Tom Fletcher Mental health resources in Toronto — for expats
Mar 27, 2026Annex · Experience date Dec 18, 2025
Mental health resources in Toronto: CAMH (Centre for Addiction and Mental Health): Canada's largest mental health hospital, offers community programs and walk-in services at 1001 Queen St W. Distress Centres of Greater Toronto: 24/7 crisis line 416-408-4357. Walk-in counselling clinics: WoodGreen Community Services, COSTI (for immigrants and newcomers specifically), and several community health centres. Private therapy: $150–250/hour without insurance, $20–50 with extended benefits. Employer EAP (Employee Assistance Program): most Toronto employers provide free confidential counselling (typically 5–8 free sessions/year). Expat-specific: COSTI and Centre for Immigrant and Community Services provide settlement counselling specifically for newcomers dealing with culture shock and transition stress.
Contributor: Amira Hassan Toronto weather — the four seasons and how to prepare
Mar 20, 2026King West · Experience date Feb 13, 2026
Toronto has genuine four-season weather. Summer (June–August): 25–35°C, humid, occasional thunderstorms — air conditioning essential in most apartments. Autumn (September–October): beautiful, 10–20°C, leaf colour change. Winter (November–March): -5 to -20°C, significant snowfall, biting wind chill, ice. Spring (April–May): highly variable, 5–15°C, muddy. Essential gear: winter coat (-20°C rated), insulated waterproof boots, wool socks, touchscreen gloves (for phone use in cold). Layering system: base layer (merino wool), mid layer (fleece), shell (waterproof). Canadian Tire, Mark's, and MEC sell quality winter gear. Do not underestimate Toronto winter — it is a serious environment that requires proper clothing.