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Toronto, Canada

The Hazelton Hotel

Michelin
Forbes
Leading Hotels of World
La Liste
World Travel Awards
Virtuoso

Toronto's only member of The Leading Hotels of the World sits on Yorkville Avenue at the precise intersection of the neighbourhood's art-gallery concentration and designer retail strip. Awarded Michelin 2 Keys in 2024 and 97.5 points on La Liste's 2026 hotel ranking, the 77-room property — designed by Yabu Pushelberg — carries the city's most legible five-star credentials in a boutique format.

The Hazelton Hotel hotel in Toronto, Canada
About

Yorkville's Boutique Luxury Tier, Explained Through One Address

Toronto's luxury hotel market divides along a familiar axis: large-footprint international flagships on one side, smaller design-led independents on the other. The Hazelton Hotel occupies the independent end of that spectrum, and at 77 rooms it operates at a scale that most branded competitors in the city cannot replicate. Where the Four Seasons Hotel Toronto and the Park Hyatt Toronto draw on global brand infrastructure, The Hazelton competes on intimacy, address precision, and a design pedigree that predates the current wave of boutique openings. Its 2024 Michelin 2 Keys award and a 97.5-point score on La Liste's 2026 hotel ranking confirm that the format is working at a level that peers are measured against, not alongside.

The Physical Container: Yabu Pushelberg's Design Logic

The design brief Yabu Pushelberg received here was not simply decorative. The Canadian firm — among the most cited in international luxury hospitality — was tasked with anchoring a contemporary grand hotel in a neighbourhood already dense with art institutions and high-end retail. The result is a property where the physical environment carries institutional weight. Bruno Billio's precarious towers of nickel-plated suitcases greet guests in the foyer; Sorel Etrog's bronze figures occupy the mezzanine. These are not hotel-lobby reproductions. The Hazelton commissions and holds Canadian art in a way that positions it closer to a private collection than a decorative programme, and the hotel's art concierge formalises that relationship for guests who want a structured walk-through.

The interiors draw on 1940s Hollywood as a reference point, but the execution reads less as period homage and more as a particular mood: warm materials, dark zebrawood furnishings, and nine-foot ceilings that give the public spaces a compressed grandeur. The spatial logic carries through to the rooms, where an average of 620 square feet is generous by urban boutique standards. French doors open onto Juliet or walkout balconies, and the soundproofing throughout is the kind of detail that becomes obvious only in its absence at lesser properties.

Room Selection and What the Layout Offers

At 77 rooms, every category here is a considered decision. The standard rooms average 620 square feet , a footprint that most Toronto hotels reserve for junior suites , and come with pillow-leading mattresses, a pillow menu, Nespresso machines, and bathrooms finished in floor-to-ceiling marble with large soaking tubs and standalone rainfall showers. The LCD television embedded in the bathroom mirror and heated floors are details that belong to a specific tier of finish: present at the Hotel, Toronto and the Fairmont Royal York in different configurations, but executed here within a room programme that does not ask guests to upgrade significantly to access them. Rates from approximately CAD 1,237 per night place the hotel in Toronto's upper price tier, consistent with its Leading Hotels of the World membership and its five-star designation.

For guests planning around the Toronto International Film Festival, the private cinema , fitted with cushioned armchairs , functions as a discreet screening space that the hotel's proximity to the festival circuit makes genuinely useful. This is not an amenity that competes with multiplex programming; it is a closed, controlled environment for private use, and during TIFF it sees consistent demand from that sector of the guest list.

One Restaurant and the Yorkville Patio Question

Toronto's dining scene has grown significantly in density and ambition over the past decade, and Yorkville's restaurant corridor is among the most scrutinised in the city. One Restaurant, the hotel's signature dining operation, holds its position in that competitive environment through a patio configuration that wraps the corner of Yorkville Avenue and Hazelton Lane. Corner-wrap patios in dense urban neighbourhoods carry an inherent social visibility that interior rooms cannot replicate, and One Restaurant's version is consistently cited among the area's better outdoor settings when the season permits. For a broader view of where One Restaurant sits in the city's dining hierarchy, EP Club's full Toronto restaurants guide maps the relevant peer set.

The Spa and Wellness Format

The Spa at Hazelton operates through a Valmont partnership , the Swiss skincare line whose clinical positioning distinguishes it from the more widely distributed spa brands found in international chain hotels. Valmont's presence in the city is limited, which gives the spa a degree of exclusivity that derives from product access rather than room count alone. The facility connects to a 24-hour gym and a heated saltwater pool with a marble-clad deck , a combination that functions as a year-round amenity rather than a seasonal offer. The eco-infrastructure underneath the building reflects the hotel's operational choices: Tesla charging stations and a green roof place it among the earlier adopters of sustainability infrastructure in Toronto's luxury tier.

Yorkville as a Location Decision

Choosing Yorkville as a base in Toronto is a specific editorial choice that rewards guests whose itinerary centres on art, retail, and dining within walking distance. The neighbourhood runs along a relatively compact strip where the concentration of designer boutiques, galleries, and independently operated restaurants creates a walkability that downtown hotel locations farther south cannot easily match. The Hazelton is positioned at the core of that strip , on Yorkville Avenue itself , which removes the transport calculation for most of what the neighbourhood offers. For guests arriving by air, the hotel sits approximately 32 kilometres from Toronto Pearson International Airport (around 30 minutes by road in average conditions) and 6 kilometres from Billy Bishop Toronto City Airport (approximately 15 minutes). The Bisha Hotel Toronto, the Ace Hotel Toronto, and the 1 Hotel Toronto offer alternative positions in the city's boutique market, each with different neighbourhood priorities. The Gladstone House operates at the cultural end of the design-hotel spectrum in West Queen West, representing a different model entirely for guests whose focus is creative programming over luxury-tier amenity.

The Hazelton in Canada's Independent Luxury Context

Canada's premium independent hotel tier is geographically dispersed and varied in orientation. The Hazelton is Toronto's contribution to that tier and the city's sole Leading Hotels of the World member. Further afield, properties like Fogo Island Inn in Joe Batt's Arm and Clayoquot Wilderness Lodge in Tofino define the remote-luxury end of the Canadian independent market; Manoir Hovey in North Hatley and Hotel Le Germain Montreal in Montreal represent the Quebec side of boutique urban luxury. On the mountain-resort side, Fairmont Chateau Whistler in Whistler, Fairmont Banff Springs in Banff, and Fairmont Chateau Lake Louise in Lake Louise operate at a different scale and under a branded flag, making the Hazelton's independent status in Canada's largest city a meaningful differentiator. The Rosewood Hotel Georgia in Vancouver is the closest Western-Canada analogue in terms of independent urban luxury positioning. For Eastern Canada, Hôtel Quintessence in Mont-Tremblant and Le Germain Charlevoix Hotel & Spa in Baie-St-Paul are worth considering for guests building a broader Canadian itinerary, as is Fairmont Empress Hotel in Victoria. In Western Canada, The Dorian, Autograph Collection in Calgary covers the design-hotel angle in Alberta. For guests extending their travels, The Royal Hotel in Picton is the obvious choice in Ontario's Prince Edward County wine region. For international reference points in the independent urban luxury tier, Aman New York and The Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City occupy a comparable position in the US market, while Aman Venice in Venice illustrates how the format scales internationally.

Planning Your Stay

The Hazelton operates with a pet-friendly policy, accepts in-house art concierge requests, and the private cinema can be arranged through the hotel. Rooms from approximately CAD 1,237 per night reflect the five-star independent tier, and occupancy during TIFF , typically held in September , runs high enough that advance booking is advisable for that window. The hotel's Google rating of 4.7 across 762 reviews reflects a consistent guest experience rather than a spike driven by novelty. The World Travel Awards named it Canada's Leading Boutique Hotel for 2025. For guests comparing this property to international peers, the 2024 Michelin 2 Keys award and La Liste's 97.5-point score for 2026 are the most legible external benchmarks available.

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