Toronto vs Vancouver: Walkability Compared
Toronto, Canada and Vancouver, Canada, side by side. Tier labels describe the average; specific addresses can vary block by block.
Toronto
Walkability tier: Moderate
Toronto's downtown core offers solid walkability with a grid street pattern, PATH underground network, and dense mixed-use neighborhoods. The city is North America's most transit-rich, though suburban areas remain car-dependent.
What works:
- PATH underground network spans 30 km connecting 75 buildings for weather-protected walking
- TTC subway and streetcar network supports walkable station-area neighborhoods
- Kensington Market and St. Lawrence Market anchor pedestrian-oriented districts
- Waterfront revitalization adding walking trails along Lake Ontario shoreline
Transit: TTC operates 4 subway lines, 10 streetcar routes, and extensive bus service; GO Transit covers regional commuter rail.
What pulls walkability down:
- Harsh winters with ice and snow reduce walking safety on poorly cleared sidewalks
- Inner suburbs built around arterial roads with minimal pedestrian infrastructure
Vancouver
Walkability tier: Walkable
Vancouver's compact downtown peninsula, seawall walking path, and SkyTrain rapid transit create strong walkability in the urban core. The city's commitment to density and transit has made it one of North America's most walkable cities.
What works:
- Stanley Park Seawall provides 28 km of continuous waterfront walking
- SkyTrain stations anchor walkable transit-oriented neighborhoods
- Granville Island and Commercial Drive offer car-light pedestrian destinations
- Protected bike lanes on major streets also calm traffic for pedestrians
Transit: TransLink operates SkyTrain (3 automated lines), buses, SeaBus ferries, and West Coast Express commuter rail.
What pulls walkability down:
- Rain on 160+ days per year reduces walking appeal without covered infrastructure
- Rapid development creating construction disruptions on pedestrian routes
Toronto walkability → · Vancouver walkability →
Built by Streets & Commons.