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The Park Room offers a comfortable stay with a size of 350-490 square feet. Inside, you'll find a king bed for a good night's sleep.
The Deluxe Room is a spacious and comfortable retreat, measuring 465 square feet. Inside, you'll find a luxurious king bed where you can relax and
This spacious Deluxe High Floor Room offers a relaxing retreat on an elevated level. With a king bed, a luxurious walk-in rain shower, and a
Experience comfort and luxury in this 1 Bedroom Suite spanning 525 square feet. The suite features a spacious king bed, a refreshing walk-in rain shower,
Welcome to the High Floor Suite! Step inside this spacious 585-square-foot retreat where you'll find yourself surrounded by comfort and luxury. The suite features a
The Corner Suite is a spacious and inviting room, covering 785 square feet. It features a comfortable king-size bed, a large living room with a
The Deluxe Corner High Floor Suite offers a spacious retreat with 850 square feet. Inside, you'll find a comfortable king bed, a separate living room
Welcome to the 2 Bedroom Bi-Level Suite, a luxurious penthouse spanning 1,430 square feet. This remarkable suite offers two bedrooms, one with a king bed
Welcome to the Presidential Suite, the hotel's most expansive and opulent space spanning 1,825 square feet. Immerse yourself in luxury and comfort as you enter
Park Hyatt Toronto is a polished Yorkville hotel with a strong sense of place. It has a restored landmark address and one of the city's most recognizable rooftop bars. The hotel sits near Avenue Road and Bloor Street, across from the Royal Ontario Museum. It is also close to the University of Toronto, luxury shopping, galleries, restaurants, and the cultural edge of downtown. It is not trying to be Toronto's tallest or flashiest stay. Its appeal is quieter: art, location, service, dining, and a clear neighborhood identity.
The current hotel feels very different from the old Park Hyatt many travelers remember. After a major restoration, the rooms, public spaces, restaurant, spa, and rooftop bar now have a cleaner style. The result is warmer and more residential than a standard business hotel, but still urban and efficient. It works well for travelers who want Yorkville access, museum culture, good food, and a refined base north of the financial district.
Yorkville is the right neighborhood for this hotel. The area mixes designer boutiques, cafes, restaurants, galleries, Victorian houses, university energy, and some of Toronto's most expensive residential streets. From the hotel, guests can walk to the Royal Ontario Museum, the Gardiner Museum, Bloor Street shops, Queen's Park, and the edge of the University of Toronto campus.
The first impression is shaped by art and restraint. Park Hyatt Toronto does not announce itself with huge lobby drama. Instead, it uses modern materials, curated artwork, soft lighting, and a calmer arrival sequence. That mood suits the building's history. This is a Toronto landmark brought forward rather than erased. Guests who like hotels with memory will find more personality here than in many newer glass towers.
The hotel has 219 rooms and suites. Rooms are modern, clean-lined, and comfortable. Expect a soft neutral palette, good beds, large bathrooms, work space, and views over Yorkville, the city, or nearby cultural landmarks. They are not oversized resort rooms, but they feel well planned. The design is calm enough for business stays and warm enough for leisure weekends.
Suites add a more residential feel, with separate seating areas and better space for longer stays. One- and two-bedroom suite options suit families, visiting academics, medical travelers, and guests who want to host privately. High-floor rooms make the strongest case because Toronto's skyline and Yorkville's low-rise texture become part of the stay. The best rooms here are not about spectacle. They are about comfort, quiet, and a sense that the hotel belongs to the neighborhood.
Joni Restaurant is the hotel's main dining room. It serves a polished take on Canadian and international cooking. It works for breakfast, lunch, afternoon tea, dinner, and hosted dining events, depending on the day and season. The room feels composed rather than formal. It has enough style for Yorkville, but enough ease for hotel guests who simply want a good meal downstairs.
Writers Room Bar is the hotel's signature social space. Set on the 17th floor, it draws on the building's literary history and offers wide views over Yorkville, the Royal Ontario Museum, and the city skyline. It is one of the best reasons to stay here rather than at a more anonymous downtown hotel. Come before sunset if the timing works. The bar feels more intimate than many high-rise lounges, and its Toronto history gives it a useful point of difference.
Stillwater Spa gives the hotel a serious wellness layer. It offers 11 treatment rooms, including two couples' suites, along with manicure and pedicure services. The mood is urban and refined rather than resort-like. It suits guests who want massage, recovery, or grooming between meetings, shopping, museum visits, or dinners in Yorkville.
The fitness center is open 24 hours on the fifth floor of the South Tower. It includes modern cardio and strength equipment, plus Peloton bikes. This is not a sprawling wellness resort, and there is no huge pool scene. The appeal is convenience and quality. Guests can keep a routine, book a spa treatment, then walk straight back into one of Toronto's most useful neighborhoods.
The hotel is strong for travelers who want to explore Toronto without being locked into the financial district. Yorkville has restaurants, shopping, galleries, and museums within easy reach. Bloor-Yonge and Museum subway access make the wider city manageable. Taxis and ride-hailing are simple from the hotel. The CN Tower, Scotiabank Arena, Rogers Centre, and waterfront are not outside the door, but they are straightforward to reach.
This location is also useful for University of Toronto visits, cultural weekends, medical appointments, and trips centered on the Bloor Street corridor. Guests who want nightlife in King West or direct waterfront access may prefer another area. Guests who want a more polished, walkable, culture-and-shopping base will likely find Yorkville more satisfying.
Service is polished but generally relaxed. The hotel handles a mix of business travelers, couples, families, visiting academics, event guests, and locals coming for dining or drinks. Concierge support, dining reservations, spa planning, car service, and event planning are important parts of the stay. The hotel also has meeting rooms and event spaces, so it can work for small corporate gatherings, private dinners, and celebrations.
The main thing to understand is that Park Hyatt Toronto is a neighborhood luxury hotel, not a full urban resort. Its strengths are Yorkville, art, food, spa, service, and a rooftop bar with history. If you want the biggest rooms in the city, the most dramatic tower views, or a resort-style pool, another hotel may suit better. If you want a calm stay in one of Toronto's best districts, this is one of the stronger choices.
Compared with Four Seasons Hotel Toronto, Park Hyatt Toronto feels more intimate and art-driven. Four Seasons has a larger luxury-resort-in-the-city feel and a major spa identity. The Hazelton Hotel is also in Yorkville and feels more boutique and residential, with a strong private-club mood. Park Hyatt sits between them: less grand than Four Seasons, less small-scale than The Hazelton, and more tied to the city's cultural history.
The Ritz-Carlton, Toronto is better for guests who want to be closer to the entertainment district, sports venues, and the waterfront. St. Regis Toronto feels more corporate and downtown, with a taller financial-district character. Shangri-La Toronto offers a strong central location and polished service, but its mood is different from Yorkville's neighborhood rhythm. Park Hyatt Toronto is the sharper pick when museums, Bloor Street, University of Toronto, and rooftop cocktails matter more than being beside the arena or lake.
Book Park Hyatt Toronto if you want a refined Yorkville address, strong dining at Joni, a memorable rooftop bar at Writers Room, Stillwater Spa, contemporary rooms, and easy access to museums, galleries, shopping, and the University of Toronto. It is especially good for couples, business travelers who prefer Yorkville over the financial district, culture-focused weekends, and guests who like hotels with a real local story.
Do not book it if you want a resort pool, a lakefront setting, or nightlife directly outside the door. This hotel is best when you want Toronto to feel polished, walkable, and culturally close. Choose it for Yorkville, for the rooftop, for the art, and for a stay that feels more personal than a standard downtown tower.
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The information provided is circumstantial - and is not indefinite in accuracy. Changes may have occurred.
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