: 416-465-7527
: david@davidcoffey.ca
MENU
: 416-465-7527
: david@davidcoffey.ca
  • Home
  • Hi. I’m David
    • Want to Know More About Me?
    • What My Clients Have Said
    • Contact Me
  • Sell
    • Why Sell With Me?
    • Selling Your Home in 6 Steps
    • Advice from Real Sellers
    • What’s Your Home Worth?
  • Buy
    • Why Buy With Me?
    • Buying a Home in 8 Steps
    • Advice from Real Buyers
    • Buying Your First Home
    • Should You Buy an Income Property?
    • Find a Home (With My Help)
  • See Properties
    • See My Featured Properties
    • See My Sold Properties
  • My Neighbourhood Guide
    • See All the Neighbourhoods
    • What’s Your Lifestyle?
    • Ex-Burbs
    • Established
    • Urban
    • Emerging
    • Hip
  • Blog
  • Get The Coffeytime Report
  • Home
  • Hi. I’m David
    • Want to Know More About Me?
    • What My Clients Have Said
    • Contact Me
  • Sell
    • Why Sell With Me?
    • Selling Your Home in 6 Steps
    • Advice from Real Sellers
    • What’s Your Home Worth?
  • Buy
    • Why Buy With Me?
    • Buying a Home in 8 Steps
    • Advice from Real Buyers
    • Buying Your First Home
    • Should You Buy an Income Property?
    • Find a Home (With My Help)
  • See Properties
    • See My Featured Properties
    • See My Sold Properties
  • My Neighbourhood Guide
    • See All the Neighbourhoods
    • What’s Your Lifestyle?
    • Ex-Burbs
    • Established
    • Urban
    • Emerging
    • Hip
  • Blog
  • Get The Coffeytime Report

See All the Neighbourhoods

If you are not entirely familiar with the Toronto neighbourhoods where I conduct the bulk of my business, you may want to see the neighbourhood guide I have created below. In it, I will share my insights and opinion of the neighbourhoods offering you a glimpse of what I find distinctive about them, and what makes it tick.

Toronto’s neighbourhoods vary widely from having everything you could imagine in walking distance with great community events, a thriving commercial strip and a central location to a neighbourhood that has been down on its luck, but ready for hipsters, restaurants and new homebuyers to spill in.

To help you navigate these neighbourhoods, I have created a gentrification scale from 1 to 5.

SCALE OF GENTRIFICATION:

  • 1

    NO IMPROVEMENT
    YET

  • 2

    EARLY SIGNS OF
    IMPROVEMENT

  • 3

    ON ITS WAY

  • 4

    DESIRED
    DESTINATION

  • 5

    ESTABLISHED

It’s up to you to determine where on this scale you would like to jump in, if you are interested in living in an emerging neighbourhood, you might start at a lower number. If you like your neighbourhoods ready to go and at or near its best, you may want to consider the higher numbers.

 

CHOOSE A NEIGBOURHOOD

The Beach (Toronto)

Compared to other Toronto neighbourhoods, the Beach is a real standout. It has that one thing that no other neighbourhood has – a huge and widely used beach. It feels more like a seaside town […]

LEARN MORE

Silverthorn (Toronto)

Here’s a question I often receive: What is Toronto’s next emerging neighbourhood? Not what is emerging now. Not what has successfully emerged. We’re looking at what is the NEXT emerging neighbourhood. In other words, what […]

LEARN MORE

Weston (Toronto)

Weston Village runs up Weston Road and its main street intersects Lawrence Ave. Many have compared this neighbourhood to an early Junction because, like the Junction, it used to be a small town that was […]

LEARN MORE

Church Wellesley Village (Toronto)

The Church Wellesley Village is about as gay as it gets in Toronto. Even back in the late 70s, this neighbourhoods packed enough LGBTQ+ power to impact the voting patterns in this riding. If you […]

LEARN MORE

Mount Dennis (Toronto)

Weston Village and Mount Dennis are in the very early stages of emerging. So, you don’t know how long it will take for these neighbourhood to take off, if they fully do.

LEARN MORE

Corso Italia and Caldenonia (Toronto)

It’s not a neighbourhood where condos are going up in all directions and the yoga and coffee shops are popping up like dandelions in Spring.

LEARN MORE

West Bend (Toronto)

Location-wise, it’s pretty good. Depending on where you are, you’re not too far from the practical Bloor subway line or the bohemian chic of the Junction.

LEARN MORE

Trinity Bellwoods (Toronto)

Along Dundas Street, a renaissance of hipster bars and restaurants has exploded. So, many consider this neighbourhood to be the centre of the centre of the universe.

LEARN MORE

The Junction Triangle (Toronto)

The access to downtown couldn’t be better. The Bloor line is right there. There are not too many places left that are affordable with easy transit access.

LEARN MORE

The Junction (Toronto)

The Junction transformed from remote outpost to cool spot around the same time as Leslieville.

LEARN MORE

St. Lawrence Market (Toronto)

Generally, I think St Lawrence Market is more peaceful than the King West condo strip on the other side of Yonge despite the number of people on both sides seeking a night out on the town.

LEARN MORE

Riverdale (Toronto)

It began at its northern region near the Danforth, just east of Broadview. In the 2000s, South Riverdale underwent rapid gentrification expansion.

LEARN MORE

Parkdale (Toronto)

The powerful push of Queen St has moved west into Parkdale bringing this legendary street’s trendiness and hip bravado with it.

LEARN MORE

Oakwood – Vaughan (Greater Toronto Area)

Statistics Canada data indicates that 8% of the area’s residents are employed in art or recreation compared with the 5% average for the City of Toronto.

LEARN MORE

Mimico (Toronto)

There’s a funny array of houses in this neighbourhood for sure. Some are post war bungalows. Others are red brick beauties.

LEARN MORE

Long Branch and New Toronto

It used to have a lot of industrial buildings and zoning. Most of that is gone now, but there is a lot to be built.

LEARN MORE

Little Italy (Toronto)

The wider boulevard really creates an open feel to the street perfect for a breezy walk on a summer’s night.

LEARN MORE

Liberty Village

For a good portion of the past fifty years, Liberty Village was a collection of old warehouses south of King Street that few people saw.

LEARN MORE

Leslieville (Toronto)

Leslieville has become the underdog neighbourhood that transformed seemingly over night.

LEARN MORE

High Park and Roncesvalles (Toronto)

igh Park and Roncesvalles seems to have it all. You have good schools, highly rentable apartments for top dollar, and it’s relatively safe.

LEARN MORE

Hamilton (Greater Toronto Area)

Hamilton does come at a price. If you do work in the city, it’s a long commute. It will take up a chunk of your day.

LEARN MORE

Distillery District (Toronto)

Strangely, the Distillery District is fairly close to downtown, but 10 years ago, there was really nothing around it.

LEARN MORE

Danforth Village (Toronto)

In a nutshell, the further east and north you go, the more affordable the housing stock for the Danforth Village.

LEARN MORE

Corktown (Toronto)

In Corktown, you are investing in a vision, but this one has been well planned.

LEARN MORE

Cabbagetown (Toronto)

Cabbagetown has the largest continuous area of preserved Victorian housing in North America. I think Cabbagetown is an exceptionally pretty place in a great location close to downtown. It was one of Toronto’s original emerging […]

LEARN MORE

Alderwood (Toronto)

Because Alderwood was once farm land, the streets were named after local farmer’s of the day. Farmer Brown’s farm became Brown’s Line and Farmer Horner’s farm became Horner Ave. Alderwood’s not like the other Toronto […]

LEARN MORE

IS THE TIME RIGHT FOR YOU TO BUY A HOME?

If so, you’ve come to the right place. Here’s what you should know:

BUYING A HOME IN 8 STEPS ADVICE FROM REAL BUYERS LIKE YOU FIND A HOME (WITH MY HELP)

The Latest in Toronto Real Estate, Delivered to You.

Want to know what's happening in Toronto real estate? Signup today, and join 500+ people just like you that are already being kept up to date.

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Changed your mind later? No problem. You can easily unsubscribe in one-click. I'll never send you anything you haven't signed up for.

David Coffey - Sales Representative

David Coffey, Sales Representative

: 416-465-7527
: david@davidcoffey.ca

Bosley Real Estate

Bosley Real Estate Ltd Brokerage

169 Danforth Ave
Toronto ON M4K 1N2

FOR BUYERS

  • Advice from Real Buyers
  • Buying a Home in 8 Steps
  • Buying Your First Home
  • Find a Home (With My Help)
  • Buying an Income Property
  • Why Buy With Me?

FOR SELLERS

  • Advice from Real Sellers
  • Selling Your Home in 6 Steps
  • What My Clients Have Said
  • What’s Your Home Worth?
  • Why Sell With Me?

HAVE A QUESTION? CONTACT ME RIGHT HERE.

Don’t want to fill out a form? You can click here to send me an email or call me at 416-465-7527.

  • This field is hidden when viewing the form
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

COPYRIGHT 2025 - DAVID COFFEY | LEGAL AND PRIVACY | WHAT'S YOUR HOME WORTH? | CONTACT ME

MADE BY ARTIFAKT DIGITAL

Notifications