As the city accelerates digital transformation across transit, housing, and services, tech professionals are discovering unprecedented opportunities-but the skillset required is shifting fast.
As hybrid work solidifies, local operators are betting big on AI-powered spaces, wellness integration, and neighbourhood-first models to redefine how knowledge workers collaborate.
As hiring accelerates across the city's tech corridor, professionals must navigate new cybersecurity risks-from AI-generated deepfake interviews to data breaches targeting job seekers.
As generative AI tools flood the market, Toronto's tech entrepreneurs are racing to build defensible products-and hiring freezes are already reshaping King West.
As Silicon Valley fragments, this city's blend of affordability, diversity, and hybrid-first thinking is attracting international talent and reshaping the future of distributed work.
From King West to the Waterfront, Toronto's startup scene combines Canadian pragmatism with American ambition-creating a rare funding advantage competitors can't replicate.
A homegrown machine learning platform is reducing commute times and cutting transportation costs for everyday residents across the Greater Toronto Area.
As the city pushes toward net-zero ambitions, clean tech leaders grapple with uncomfortable realities about supply chains, affordability, and who actually benefits.
With venture capital flooding into privacy-focused startups, the city's tech corridor is becoming a global hub for companies protecting data in an increasingly hostile digital landscape.
Digital wallets, real-time transfers, and AI-powered savings apps are quietly transforming financial life across the city-and locals are embracing the shift.
A King West-based govtech firm has just landed a $47 million Series B to roll out real-time traffic and waste management across North America's largest city.
A homegrown machine-learning platform is helping local boutiques and mid-market retailers slash waste and boost margins-and just closed a $12 million Series A round.
From AI-powered healthcare tools to advanced manufacturing software, local innovation hubs along King West and beyond are racing to define the next wave of Canadian tech leadership.
From longer commutes to shorter lunches, coworking platforms and hybrid arrangements are fundamentally altering how Torontonians spend their time and money.
From King West to Waterfront Innovation, the city's most promising startups and established players are unveiling major product launches and R&D pivots that could reshape North American markets by 2027.