Regal Heights

52Chill

Regal Heights is Toronto's west-end plateau done right. Fifty-three restaurants, 17 cafes, 9 parks. The digital nomad score maxes. You live here because you've decided the Danforth is too far east and you want a Tim Hortons you're not ashamed to walk past.

Score Breakdown

Dining
55
Walkability
60
Daily Essentials
50
Recreation
65
Family
0
Services
83

About this Neighborhood

Regal Heights sits on the Wychwood plateau, one of Toronto's quiet geographic advantages — a slight elevation that separates the neighbourhood from the Bloor Street churn below. The restaurant count (53) skews toward function: 241 Pizza, McDonald's, and Zini Pizza are the top entries, which understates what's actually here. Seventeen cafes (Tim Hortons, S&L Cafe, Krave Coffee) give the neighbourhood a digital nomad gravity score of 100 — not because it's particularly artisanal, but because volume and density compensate. Social glue is 72, reflecting genuine dwell-time community formation. Nine parks thread through the residential streets. Grocery density (10) is sufficient. The 15-minute completeness score is 83, with courts as the missing category. Who lives here: families who bought before the Wychwood area got expensive and now have no plans to leave, and renters who've chosen livability over address cachet.

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