Toronto in 4 Days on a Budget (With Daily Costs)
4 Days in Toronto: For People Who Want a Ball Game in the Mix
Four days lets you build in a Blue Jays game or a full shopping afternoon without sacrificing the museums and neighbourhoods everyone tells you to see. This version leans a little more into sports, shopping, and evening entertainment than a standard museum crawl, so budget accordingly. Coming from our 2-day itinerary with extra time to spend? This is the natural next step, still entirely inside the city.
| Day | Focus | Rough daily cost |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | CN Tower, Royal Ontario Museum | ~75-100 CAD |
| 2 | Toronto Islands, Kensington Market | ~40-60 CAD |
| 3 | Fort York, Art Gallery of Ontario | ~35-55 CAD |
| 4 | Eaton Centre, a ball game | varies (game tickets on top) |
Book these before you go:
- CN Tower admission, for a locked time slot before the Day 1 crowds build (book CN Tower tickets on GetYourGuide )
- Your hotel for all 4 nights, since Drake Hotel and Hotel X rooms move fast in summer (check rates on Booking.com )
- Blue Jays tickets at Rogers Centre, if a home game lines up with your dates: check the schedule and book before you land, not after
Where to stay: The Drake Hotel in West Queen West is trendy and central if you want to be near nightlife ($$$). Hotel X Toronto is a solid upscale pick with waterfront views ($$$). The Rex Hotel has a legendary jazz bar downstairs, which is a nice bonus if you’re staying in that night anyway ($$).
Getting around: grab a PRESTO card the moment you land, it’s the same tap fare (3.30 CAD) across subway, streetcar, and bus. Downtown is genuinely walkable, so save the transit for longer hops rather than every single leg. Currency is the Canadian dollar; English dominates daily life even though French is technically an official language. Tip 15-20% at restaurants and bars, no exceptions.
Day 1: Downtown landmarks
Morning: start at Nathan Phillips Square to see City Hall and the Toronto sign (a 2015 Pan Am Games installation the city decided to keep permanently), then head to the CN Tower . General admission runs about 45 CAD for adults, cheaper if you book online ahead of time. Ripley’s Aquarium is next door but sold as a separate ticket, so don’t assume it’s bundled in.
Afternoon: the Royal Ontario Museum has dynamic pricing, usually 20-31 CAD for adults, and through early September kids 4-17 get in free with adults 18-24 at half price, worth checking before you buy. Queen’s Park nearby is a quiet green break if the museum wears you out.
Evening: Pai Northern Thai Kitchen in the Entertainment District is worth the wait if you don’t mind a line.
Day 2: Islands and Kensington
Morning: take the ferry to the Toronto Islands, about 9.57 CAD round trip for adults. This is honestly a better use of a morning than most paid downtown attractions, the skyline view from the water is the best angle in the city and it costs a fraction of EdgeWalk. Want it guided instead? Compare Toronto Islands tours on Viator .
Afternoon: Kensington Market for vintage shops, street art, and a genuinely diverse food scene. Grab tacos at Seven Lives if you’re hungry.
Evening: catch a show at the Ed Mirvish Theatre if there’s a touring production on, or just wander the Entertainment District’s bars.
Day 3: History and art
Morning: Fort York National Historic Site covers the War of 1812 defenses and is a quieter, less crowded stop than most downtown sights.
Afternoon: the AGO’s general collection is genuinely free year-round for Ontario residents under 25 via a no-cost annual pass, though it’s worth confirming current rules before you go since special exhibitions are ticketed separately.
Evening: Canoe, high up in the TD Bank Tower, is the splurge dinner of the trip if you want one memorable meal with a view.
Day 4: Shopping and a ball game
Morning: the Eaton Centre downtown covers pretty much every retail need in one building, useful if you forgot to pack for Toronto’s weather swings. Note that the old Hudson’s Bay flagship that used to anchor this stretch closed for good in 2025, so don’t go looking for it.
Afternoon: if the Blue Jays are in town, catch a game at Rogers Centre, still riding real fan energy off their 2025 World Series run. Check the schedule before you build this day around it, since it only works if there’s a home game. Scotiabank Arena, home to the Leafs and Raptors, is a short walk away if you’d rather chase basketball or hockey tickets instead.
Evening: the King Street Food Court is a low-key way to close out the trip with a wide spread of cuisines without committing to a sit-down reservation.
Extra stops if you have energy left: Casa Loma (from about 32 CAD) has genuinely impressive architecture and gardens if castles are your thing. The Distillery District is a free cobblestone pedestrian zone worth an hour of wandering. The Hockey Hall of Fame is inside Brookfield Place, not a standalone building, so don’t go looking for a separate entrance.
One practical note before you land: skip the taxi stands pushing flat “downtown rate” deals outside Pearson arrivals. Use the official taxi queue or the UP Express, and you’ll pay less either way.
Want six or seven days? Our longer itineraries build on this same spine and add the Danforth, Little India, and a slower pace throughout: 6-day itinerary and 7-day itinerary . Our Toronto overview has the full neighbourhood and food breakdown if you want more background before you go.