The Top 22 Hotels Near Restaurant Pearl Morissette
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A Forbes Five Star hotel on University Avenue that pulls off the neat trick of feeling genuinely calm in the middle of downtown Toronto. Rooms are sleek and marble-heavy, the kind you don't want to leave, and you won't have to since the in-room iPad handles everything from room service to reservations. The lobby bar does live music and craft cocktails, drawing a polished crowd who clearly knew what they were booking.
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A Forbes Five Star luxury hotel in the heart of Toronto's financial district, the St. Regis is the kind of place where the suites feel more like a wealthy friend's condo than a hotel room. Butlers, a 24-hour concierge, a saltwater infinity pool with serious views, and a spa that hands you champagne after your treatment. The crowd is business travel done very, very well.
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If you're going to splurge on a hotel in Toronto, this is a solid place to do it. The Ritz-Carlton sits right where downtown actually gets interesting, a short walk from the CN Tower, TIFF, and a string of good restaurants on King Street. Rooms are genuinely large by city standards, with floor-to-ceiling windows that earn their keep. The Italian restaurant on-site is legitimately good, and the bar handles cocktails without embarrassing itself.
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A boutique luxury hotel in King West that takes the whole "eco-friendly" thing seriously enough that you'll actually notice it, with plants covering nearly every surface like the building is slowly returning to nature. The rooftop bar has genuinely good views over the neighborhood, and you're steps from the waterfront and the best of Queen West. Cool crowd, nice rooms, and a vibe that doesn't feel corporate despite very much being a hotel chain.
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Yorkville's go-to boutique hotel for anyone who wants to feel like a low-key celebrity without making a fuss about it. The rooms are genuinely spacious and sleek, the staff are the kind who remember things without being asked, and the concierge actually solves problems. There's a solid spa and a good restaurant on-site, so you barely need to leave. The crowd skews toward people who could afford louder and chose not to.
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A Forbes Five-Star hotel in Yorkville, which is basically Toronto's answer to the Upper East Side. The rooms lean into the Canadian landscape in a way that feels like good design rather than tourism-board decor, and Daniel Boulud runs the restaurant, which tells you everything about the food situation. The spa, the pool, the lounge, the rooms: it's all exactly what you'd expect from a Four Seasons, delivered without apology.
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A Forbes Four Star hotel that's been the quiet benchmark for serious luxury in Toronto for years, the Park Hyatt sits at the edge of Yorkville with the understated confidence of somewhere that doesn't need to prove anything. The rooms lean contemporary with nods to Canadian landscape art, the rooftop bar draws a well-dressed crowd for views over the city, and the lobby alone makes you feel like you've upgraded your entire trip.
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