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LocationToronto, Canada
Forbes
Leading Hotels of World
Michelin
La Liste
World Travel Awards
Virtuoso

A Michelin 2-Key boutique hotel on Yorkville Avenue, The Hazelton holds 77 rooms averaging 620 square feet, interiors by Yabu Pushelberg, a Canadian art collection curated through a dedicated art concierge, and a restaurant that anchors the neighbourhood's dining circuit. A member of Leading Hotels of the World and a 2026 La Liste Top Hotels entrant at 97.5 points, it positions firmly at the upper end of Toronto's luxury boutique tier.

The Hazelton Hotel hotel in Toronto, Canada
About

Yorkville's Boutique Upper Bracket

Toronto's luxury hotel market has split along a familiar axis: large international flagships with hundreds of rooms and full convention infrastructure on one side, and design-led boutiques with tighter inventories and more deliberate identities on the other. The Hazelton sits in the second camp, with 77 rooms, a Yorkville Avenue address, and credentials that align it with a specific peer set. It holds a Michelin 2 Keys designation (2024), membership in Leading Hotels of the World (2025), and a score of 97.5 points on the 2026 La Liste Leading Hotels list. In Toronto, only the Four Seasons Hotel Toronto sits at the same Michelin tier. The Park Hyatt Toronto, Hotel, Toronto, and 1 Hotel Toronto each carry a single Michelin Key, which places The Hazelton in a narrower bracket by that measure.

The Yorkville address matters beyond postcode signalling. The neighbourhood concentrates galleries, independent boutiques, and restaurants in a walkable stretch that few other Toronto districts replicate at that density. For a guest whose itinerary is built around the city's cultural and dining infrastructure, the location functions as a practical advantage as much as a symbolic one. The hotel sits roughly 32 kilometres from Toronto Pearson International Airport (approximately 30 minutes by car) and 6 kilometres from Billy Bishop Toronto City Airport (approximately 15 minutes), which makes it logistically accessible from both major entry points.

What the Building Communicates on Arrival

The approach along Yorkville Avenue sets a particular register. The architecture keeps its scale in proportion with the surrounding low-rise streetscape rather than asserting itself through height, and the ground-floor patio at the corner of Yorkville Avenue and Hazelton Lane extends the hotel's presence onto the street in a way that feels embedded in the neighbourhood rather than planted there. That patio, attached to One Restaurant, has become one of the more observed outdoor dining spaces in Yorkville during warmer months, partly because the corner position captures foot traffic from two directions and partly because the restaurant draws a local clientele alongside hotel guests.

Inside, the design was handled by Yabu Pushelberg, the Canadian firm whose work appears across a range of international luxury properties. At The Hazelton, the brief leaned toward 1940s Hollywood as a reference point, translated through dark zebrawood furnishings, nine-foot ceilings, and French doors that open onto Juliet or walkout balconies in many rooms. The firm integrated Canadian artwork throughout the building, and the hotel maintains an art concierge programme to help guests engage with the collection. The works include Bruno Billio's nickel-plated suitcase towers in the foyer and Sorel Etrog's bronze figures on the mezzanine level, both drawn from the Canadian canon.

One Restaurant and the Question of Sourcing

Hotel restaurants in Toronto occupy a complicated position. The better ones function as neighbourhood destinations that happen to share an address with guest rooms; the weaker ones serve primarily as a convenience amenity. One Restaurant at The Hazelton has, by most accounts, earned standing in the first category. It is consistently referenced as one of the more serious dining addresses in Yorkville, which is a neighbourhood that has attracted independent restaurant investment alongside hotel-attached operations. For a fuller picture of where One Restaurant fits within Toronto's broader dining circuit, see our full Toronto restaurants guide.

The editorial angle of sourcing matters here because Yorkville's restaurant positioning increasingly connects premium ingredients to identifiable origins, a pattern visible across the neighbourhood's higher-end operators. Hotel restaurants that compete in this tier tend to anchor their menus in seasonal Canadian produce and regional proteins, using provenance as a differentiator from international luxury chains that operate more standardised supply chains. The corner patio functions as One Restaurant's most immediate seasonal asset: the transition from enclosed dining room to open terrace tracks the Ontario growing calendar in a way that gives the outdoor experience a distinct character from the interior one.

Rooms, Amenities, and the Logic of the Offer

The 77 rooms average 620 square feet, which is on the generous side for a city-centre boutique in Toronto. The bathrooms draw consistent attention: floor-to-ceiling marble, standalone rainfall showers, deep-soaking tubs, heated floors, and LCD screens embedded in mirrors. The L'Occitane bath product programme is a standard premium-tier signal, but the heated floors and mirror televisions skew toward the upper end of boutique hotel specification. Rooms are soundproofed, a detail that carries practical weight on a busy Yorkville street, and each has a Nespresso machine and pillow menu.

Spa operates with Swiss skincare line Valmont, a brand whose hotel spa presence is concentrated in European luxury properties. Its appearance at The Hazelton places the spa in a specific reference set, distinct from the broader Canadian spa market. The 24-hour gym and heated saltwater pool with a marble-clad deck round out the wellness offer. The private cinema is a more unusual amenity: a discreet screening room with upholstered armchairs that sees particular use during the Toronto International Film Festival, when the hotel's proximity to festival venues and its guest profile align closely with industry demand.

Hotel also holds some environmental credentials worth noting for guests who factor these into property selection. It has Tesla charging stations and operates a green roof, which the property claims as among the first in Toronto's hotel sector to adopt. It is also pet-friendly, an operational detail that narrows the list of comparable boutique options for travelling guests with animals. The starting rate sits at approximately $1,237 CAD, positioning it above the midrange of Toronto's boutique tier and in line with what the Michelin 2 Keys designation implies about competitive pricing.

Where It Sits in Canada's Luxury Hotel Picture

Toronto's boutique hotel scene has grown substantially over the past decade, with new entrants like the Ace Hotel Toronto and the Bisha Hotel Toronto occupying different price and style registers, and established properties like the Fairmont Royal York and the SoHo Hotel Toronto serving distinct guest profiles. The Hazelton's positioning is most comparable to what design-led boutiques achieve in other major markets: low key count, high per-room specification, and amenity depth concentrated in spa, dining, and cultural programming rather than conference infrastructure.

Within Canada more broadly, the conversation around boutique luxury has expanded well beyond Toronto's city limits. Properties like Fogo Island Inn in Joe Batt's Arm and Clayoquot Wilderness Lodge in Tofino define the wilderness-luxury end of the spectrum, while urban properties such as Rosewood Hotel Georgia in Vancouver and Auberge Saint-Antoine in Québec City operate in culturally embedded city-centre positions comparable to The Hazelton's in Toronto. Guests planning itineraries that combine Toronto with other Canadian destinations might also consider Fairmont Chateau Whistler in Whistler, Fairmont Banff Springs in Banff, Fairmont Chateau Lake Louise in Lake Louise, Fairmont Empress Hotel in Victoria, or Manoir Hovey in North Hatley depending on the trip's broader arc. For international comparisons in the premium urban boutique tier, The Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City, Aman New York, and Aman Venice represent the ceiling of this format in their respective cities.

Planning a Stay

Rates start at approximately $1,237 CAD per night. The hotel is located at 118 Yorkville Avenue, Toronto, ON M5R 1H5. Guests travelling during the Toronto International Film Festival period should book well in advance, as the private cinema and the hotel's general profile draw significant industry demand during that window. For guests focused on the broader Toronto experience, our full Toronto hotels guide covers the range of options across neighbourhoods and price tiers. The bars and restaurant circuit around Yorkville is covered in our full Toronto bars guide, and if you are planning evenings beyond One Restaurant, our full Toronto restaurants guide maps the wider scene. Additional context on Toronto's cultural programming is available in our full Toronto experiences guide and our full Toronto wineries guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which room category should I book at The Hazelton Hotel?
The standard guest rooms already average 620 square feet with nine-foot ceilings, heated bathroom floors, and standalone rainfall showers, so there is less functional gap between entry and upper categories here than at larger properties. That said, rooms with Juliet or walkout balconies add meaningful outdoor access in a neighbourhood leading appreciated at street level, making the balcony-facing allocation worth requesting at booking. The Michelin 2 Keys designation and Leading Hotels of the World membership apply across the property, so the credential floor is consistent regardless of room tier.
What is The Hazelton Hotel known for?
The Hazelton is recognised primarily for its Yorkville address, its boutique scale (77 rooms), and the combination of Yabu Pushelberg interiors with a curated Canadian art collection. It holds a Michelin 2 Keys rating (2024) and a 97.5-point score on the 2026 La Liste Leading Hotels list, placing it at the leading of Toronto's boutique tier by those measures. One Restaurant, particularly its corner patio, is a consistent reference point in the city's dining conversation independent of the hotel context.
How far ahead should I plan for The Hazelton Hotel?
For standard travel periods, booking four to six weeks ahead is generally sufficient for most room categories at Toronto boutique hotels in this price range. For stays coinciding with the Toronto International Film Festival (typically September), planning three to four months in advance is advisable, as the hotel's private screening room and overall guest profile make it a preferred address during that period. Rates start at approximately $1,237 CAD, so confirming availability early also allows for comparison against the Four Seasons Hotel Toronto and other Michelin-recognised properties before prices firm up.
Is The Hazelton Hotel a good base for visiting Toronto's gallery and museum circuit?
The Yorkville Avenue location places the hotel within walking distance of the neighbourhood's concentration of commercial art galleries, and the hotel itself maintains an art concierge programme to help guests engage with its own Canadian art collection, which includes works by Bruno Billio and Sorel Etrog. The Royal Ontario Museum is also within the Yorkville-Bloor corridor, making the hotel a practical base for guests whose itinerary prioritises cultural institutions alongside dining and retail. The 2024 Michelin 2 Keys recognition reflects the hotel's standing as a full-service cultural address, not only an accommodation option.

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