parking toronto

It's now a lot easier to find parking spots in Toronto

Toronto can say goodbye to its second-favourite excuse for being late (after TTC woes, natch). "I couldn't find parking!" is about to get way less believable, thanks to Google.

The tech juggernaut announced in a blog post today that drivers in 25 cities outside the U.S., including Toronto, can now use a Google Maps feature called "parking difficulty."

Introduced to American markets earlier this year, the feature promises to "give you a heads up on what kind of parking crunch to prepare for when you’re on the go."

It does this by calculating how hard or easy it will be to find parking spots near your final destination based on historical data and other, more technical, factors.

The idea is that, equipped with this knowledge, drivers will know how much time to allocate for parking before they leave the house. A rating of "limited" means you'd better give yourself a healthy buffer if you want to be somewhere on time.

Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver are the only Canadian cities that have been equipped with this feature so far, though it doesn't seem to work for locations across the entire city just yet.

toronto parking google

Almost everywhere with a parking difficulty rating in the City of Toronto is "limited," as indicated by a red P symbol.

Google also announced a feature today that will help people find places to park, complete with walking directions from car to destination. Unfortunately, "find parking" is currently only available in 25 U.S. cities.

Still, from what I can see of "parking difficulties" in downtown Toronto, the map is pretty accurate.

Parking near the Rogers Centre? Limited. Parking near the ROM? Limited. Parking near Sick Kids, St. Joe's, Toronto General or any other hospital in the city? Limited.

So, according to Google, it's difficult to park in Toronto. Thanks, Google!

Lead photo by

AshtonPal


Latest Videos



Latest Videos


Join the conversation Load comments

Latest in City

Huge invasion of enormous venomous spiders could soon 'parachute' into Ontario

Royal Canadian Mint's new releases include a coin with a jaw-dropping price tag

It will be a huge headache to get to popular Toronto beach for at least a month

Canada's largest spider is a fearsome predator that grows to 9 cm and lives in Ontario

Motorist ridiculed for driving on Toronto sidewalk but some disagree on who to blame

Toronto man claims thieves now breaking into cars to steal gas pedals in viral video

People holding dead animal bodies turned heads next to busy Toronto destinations

Here's a preview of what it will be like to ride on new Toronto LRT line