Seaton Village

55Chill

Seaton Village has the highest restaurant count in this batch — 92 — and Christie Pits Park, which has hosted Toronto softball rivalries for decades. Snakes & Lattes is here. Twenty-eight coffee spots. It's the kind of neighborhood where you move in for two years and stay for ten.

Score Breakdown

Dining
55
Walkability
60
Daily Essentials
50
Recreation
85
Family
0
Services
83

About this Neighborhood

Seaton Village occupies a narrow strip of west-central Toronto between Bathurst and Christie, defined by Victorian houses, a park that earned its name from actual violence, and an eating and drinking scene that punches above what the neighborhood's profile should allow. Ninety-two restaurants is an extraordinary number — the count includes everything from Mary Brown's to the kind of cash-only spots that don't show up in apps. Twenty-eight coffee locations include Emily Rose Cafe and Real Fruit Bubble Tea alongside the predictable chains. Snakes & Lattes is the neighborhood's cultural anchor: a board game cafe that generates genuine community, not just foot traffic. Christie Pits Park is 14 acres of diamond fields, wading pools, and summer culture — it's what separates this neighborhood from adjacent ones with comparable numbers. Sixteen fitness spots and 19 grocery options round out a category spread that the data calls remote-friendly. Social Glue at 67 is lower than the density suggests, which tracks — high transience from nearby schools keeps turnover high.

Highlights

Walk Score94
Flood RiskX

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