From commuters on the TTC to shoppers in Kensington Market, Torontonians are discovering that privacy protection and digital safety have become as essential as locking your door.
From battery storage to grid optimization, a wave of homegrown green tech companies are attracting serious capital and reshaping how Canada tackles its net-zero commitments.
From King West startups to Waterfront innovation hubs, a new generation of financial tech companies is building the infrastructure that's replacing traditional banking.
Major tech companies and startups across King West and beyond are reshaping hiring strategies in 2026, creating both opportunities and challenges for professionals navigating the city's innovation landscape.
From traffic signals that learn your commute to water systems that predict leaks before they happen, digital transformation is quietly solving some of the city's most persistent problems.
Discover why Toronto's tech ecosystem attracts startups and engineers. Lower costs, top talent, and cross-sector collaboration make it Canada's innovation capital.
As coworking spaces proliferate across King West and beyond, the city faces hard questions about surveillance, inequality, and worker autonomy that aren't being asked loudly enough.
From Waterfront Toronto's digital backbone to emerging gov-tech startups, private and public capital is fueling a transformation that's turning Canada's largest city into a living laboratory for connected urban systems.
A King West company has cracked the code on turning manufacturing wastewater into both drinking water and electricity-and it's catching the attention of major utilities across Ontario.
As global innovation hubs compete for dominance, Toronto's distinctive blend of accessibility, talent diversity, and institutional support is reshaping how technology companies think about growth.
From King West to the waterfront, the city's unique blend of regulatory openness, talent density, and cross-border proximity is reshaping how the world thinks about digital money.
A wave of local companies are pitching digital solutions to Toronto's most pressing infrastructure and administrative challenges, signaling a shift in how Canada's largest city operates.
With venture capital drying up and competition from Montreal intensifying, King West founders are rethinking growth strategies and doubling down on profitability over hype.
A potent mix of talent retention, cross-sector collaboration, and regulatory openness is positioning Toronto as a rival to Silicon Valley-without the burnout.