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The Ontario Line  ·  Under Construction  ·  East Toronto

Transit · East TorontoThe Ontario
Line.

Toronto’s next rapid-transit spine runs straight through the east end. Four stations — East Harbour, Corktown, Leslieville, and Gerrard — reshape how the neighbourhoods we cover connect to the core. Here’s the corridor, and what it means on the ground.

The east-end stations

Why the corridor matters

Rapid transit changes how a neighbourhood lives. A station within walking distance widens who can get where, without a car — and that access is a durable part of what makes a place liveable. The Ontario Line brings that access to a stretch of the east end that has, until now, leaned on streetcars and the Danforth subway.

The line is under construction. Metrolinx has not confirmed an opening date, and we don’t put a number on what transit “adds” to a home — anyone who does is guessing. What we can say plainly: the stations land in neighbourhoods we know street by street, and the connectivity they bring is real. For the current market picture in any of them, reach out.

Frequently asked: the Ontario Line

Which east-Toronto neighbourhoods does the Ontario Line serve?

In the east end, the Ontario Line adds stations at East Harbour, Corktown, Leslieville, and Gerrard — connecting Corktown, Leslieville, Riverside, and the eastern waterfront.

What is East Harbour Station?

East Harbour is a new transit hub where the Ontario Line meets GO rail — a regional interchange anchoring Toronto's eastern waterfront.

Is the Ontario Line running yet?

No. The Ontario Line is under construction. Metrolinx has not confirmed an opening date for the line.

Buying along the Ontario Line? Let’s talk.

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