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Toronto, OntarioCity of Toronto

Home Additions Cost in Toronto

Toronto home additions prices are at the Ontario baseline. Expect to pay $200 – $400 per sq ft.

$200

Starting from

3-6 months

Typical timeline

20%

Contingency

$141,080

Max rebates

Home Additions Cost Breakdown — Toronto

Scope (Toronto)LowHigh
Ground-floor addition (per sq ft, finished)$200$400
Second-storey addition (per sq ft)$250$450
Sunroom or 3-season room$20,000$50,000
Garage conversion (per sq ft)$100$200
Architectural + engineering drawings$5,000$15,000

Visual Price Ranges

Ground-floor addition (per sq ft, finished)

$200per sq ft$400

Second-storey addition (per sq ft)

$250per sq ft$450

Sunroom or 3-season room

$20,000per project$50,000

Garage conversion (per sq ft)

$100per sq ft$200

Architectural + engineering drawings

$5,000per project$15,000

Labour vs Materials in Toronto

Labour

100%

of Toronto baseline

Labour costs in Toronto match the Toronto baseline.

Materials

100%

of Toronto baseline

Material costs are relatively stable across the GTA. Toronto sees comparable material costs compared to Toronto.

Professional Fees

Home Additions in Toronto may require engineering or professional design services. These costs are in addition to the construction estimate.

Permit Costs in Toronto

Toronto permit fees based on project value (typically $12-$15 per $1,000 of construction value).

Building Permit (Addition)

Municipal building department

$1,500-$4,000

Committee of Adjustment Minor Variance (if required)

Municipal Committee of Adjustment

$1,000-$3,000

Electrical Safety Authority (ESA) Permit

ESA

$150-$400

Plumbing Permit

Municipal or private inspector

$100-$250

HVAC/Gas Permit

TSSA

$100-$200

Full permit process

Available Rebates in Toronto

HST New Housing Rebate (Substantial Renovations)

CRA

Up to $16,080 HST rebate

If your renovation is classified as "substantial" (90%+ of interior removed/replaced), you may qualify for the federal GST/HST new housing rebate. Combined federal + Ontario portions can return up to $16,080 in tax.

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Ontario Renovates

Ontario Ministry of Municipal Affairs

Up to $25,000 forgivable loan

A forgivable loan for low-to-moderate income homeowners to make essential home repairs, accessibility modifications, or create a secondary suite. Delivered through local Service Managers.

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Toronto Eco-Roof Incentive Program

City of Toronto

Up to $100,000

Grants for green roofs ($100/m²) and cool roofs ($2-$5/m²) on residential and commercial buildings. Green roofs up to $100,000; cool roofs up to $50,000.

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Net Cost After Maximum Rebates

$0 – $0

Based on $141,080 in maximum stackable rebates. Actual amounts depend on eligibility and application.

See all rebates for Toronto

Phase-by-Phase Timeline

1

1. Feasibility and Zoning Review

1-2 weeks

Measure your lot and existing house. Check zoning bylaws for setbacks, lot coverage, and height limits. Most municipalities publish zoning maps and bylaws online. Calculate whether your proposed addition fits within zoning rules — if not, you'll need a Committee of Adjustment variance (adds 6-12 weeks and $1,000-$3,000). Verify services capacity: does your electrical panel have room for new circuits, or do you need a service upgrade? Is your HVAC system sized for the added square footage, or do you need a second system? Check for easements, rights-of-way, or building restrictions on your property (title search, $75-$150).

2

2. Design and Structural Engineering

3-6 weeks

Hire an architect or designer to create floor plans, elevations, and sections showing the addition. The designer coordinates with a structural engineer who assesses existing foundation and framing capacity, designs new foundations and beams, and specifies tie-in details. Expect drawings showing: foundation plan (footings, walls, bearing points), framing plan (joists, beams, rafters), roof plan (tie-ins, valleys, flashing), wall sections (insulation, air barrier, cladding), electrical and plumbing rough-ins. Cost: $3,000-$8,000 for design, $1,500-$4,000 for structural engineering.

3

3. Committee of Adjustment Variance (if needed)

6-12 weeks

If your addition violates setbacks, lot coverage, or height limits, apply for a minor variance. Submit application with drawings, site plan, and fee ($1,000-$2,000). The Committee schedules a public hearing (6-10 weeks out). Neighbours within 60 meters are notified and can attend to support or object. The Committee grants or denies the variance based on four tests: Does the variance maintain the general intent of the zoning bylaw? Is it desirable for the development of the land? Is it minor in nature? Does it maintain the general intent of the official plan? Approval is common for reasonable requests, but neighbour opposition complicates things. Hire a land-use planner ($1,500-$3,000) if the request is contentious.

4

4. Building Permit Application

4-8 weeks

Submit drawings and structural letters to the municipal building department with permit application fee ($1,500-$4,000 depending on project value). Review takes 4-8 weeks. Common revision requests: structural detail clarifications, energy code compliance (R-values, window ratings), fire separation if the addition creates a second dwelling unit, egress window sizing. Some municipalities require HVAC drawings, plumbing isometric drawings, or energy models (EnerGuide). Once approved, you receive a building permit and can start construction.

5

5. Site Prep and Excavation

3-5 days

Stake out the addition footprint (string lines and batter boards). Call Ontario One Call (1-800-400-2255) for utility locates — gas, hydro, water, sewer, telecom must be marked before digging. Excavate for footings — dig below frost line (4 feet / 1.2m in Ontario) to prevent frost heave. If building alongside existing foundation, dig carefully to avoid undermining it (excavate in short sections, brace if needed). If soils are poor (clay, fill, high water table), engineer may specify deeper footings, wider footings, or engineered fill (clear stone, compacted granular).

6

6. Foundation Pour

1-2 weeks

Build footing forms, install rebar (typically #4 or #5 bars, 18" spacing), pour concrete (3000-4000 PSI). Footings must cure 3-7 days before loading. Build foundation wall forms (ICF blocks, wood forms, or aluminum panels), install vertical rebar tied to footing rebar, pour walls. If tying to existing foundation, drill and epoxy rebar into old concrete before pouring. Install weeping tile around perimeter (4" perforated pipe in clear stone jacket, sloped to sump or daylight drain). Damp-proof exterior of foundation walls (rubberized asphalt or spray-on membrane). Inspection: footing inspection (before pour), foundation wall inspection (before backfill).

7

7. Framing (Floors, Walls, Roof)

3-5 weeks

Install sill plates on foundation (pressure-treated 2x6, anchored with foundation bolts). Frame floor joists (typically 2x10 SPF at 16" O.C. — check engineer's span tables). Install subfloor (3/4" tongue-and-groove OSB or plywood, glued and screwed). Frame exterior walls (2x6 at 16" O.C. for R-20+ insulation) and interior partition walls (2x4 at 16" O.C.). Install headers over windows and doors (doubled 2x10 or LVL per engineer). Raise and brace walls. Frame roof — rafters or trusses per engineer's design. Tie into existing roof structure: sister new rafters to existing, install valley rafters, flash valleys with ice/water shield and metal flashing. Install roof sheathing (1/2" or 5/8" OSB). Inspection: framing inspection (critical — inspector checks structural connections, bearing points, beam sizes, roof tie-ins).

8

8. Exterior Envelope (Roofing, Windows, Siding)

2-4 weeks

Install roofing underlayment (synthetic or ice/water shield in valleys and eaves), shingles, flashings (step flashing, valley flashing, kick-out flashing, chimney crickets). Install windows and exterior doors (rough opening must match window size — shim and flash per manufacturer specs). Install house wrap (Tyvek or similar) over sheathing, tape seams. Install siding to match existing (brick, vinyl, fiber cement, stucco) — matching brick coursing and mortar color is tricky; vinyl is easier. Seal the junction between old and new with flashing and caulk (butyl or polyurethane, not acrylic).

9

9. Rough-Ins (Electrical, Plumbing, HVAC)

2-3 weeks

Run electrical: new circuits from main panel or sub-panel, outlets (12" above floor, 4' spacing on walls), switches, lights, smoke/CO alarms. Rough-in plumbing if adding bathroom or kitchen: drain lines (slope 1/4" per foot), vent stack (extends through roof or ties to existing vent), supply lines (PEX or copper, hot on left). Install HVAC: extend existing ductwork or add new system (furnace, AC, heat pump). Inspections: rough electrical (ESA), rough plumbing, rough HVAC/gas (TSSA if applicable).

10

10. Insulation and Vapour Barrier

1-2 weeks

Insulate exterior walls (R-20 minimum for 2x6 walls — batt or spray foam), ceiling/roof (R-50 minimum in Ontario — blown cellulose or spray foam). Spray foam at the junction between old and new structure (closed-cell, 2" minimum) to seal air leaks. Install vapour barrier (6-mil poly) on warm side of insulation in heated spaces, tape seams. Inspection: insulation inspection (before drywall).

11

11. Drywall, Finishes, Trim

4-6 weeks

Hang drywall (1/2" for walls, 5/8" for ceilings), tape and mud joints, sand smooth, prime and paint. Install flooring (hardwood, laminate, LVP, tile). Install interior doors, baseboards, casing, crown moulding. Connect electrical devices (outlets, switches, fixtures). Connect plumbing fixtures (sinks, toilets, showers). Install cabinets and countertops if adding kitchen or bathroom.

12

12. Final Inspections and Occupancy

1-2 weeks

Book final inspections: building final (structure, envelope, fire separation if applicable), ESA final (electrical), plumbing final, HVAC/gas final. Install smoke and CO alarms (interconnected per OBC 9.10.18). Inspector will verify all code requirements, check handrails on stairs (34"-38" height, graspable profile), test GFCI outlets in kitchens/bathrooms, verify egress windows in bedrooms. Once all inspections pass, receive occupancy permit and move in.

What's Included vs Not Included

Typically Included

  • Architectural and structural drawings
  • Building permit and application fees
  • Foundation (footings, walls, slab)
  • Framing, roofing, and exterior finishes
  • Insulation, vapor barrier, and drywall
  • Electrical rough-in and panel modifications
  • Plumbing rough-in (if applicable)
  • HVAC extension to new space
  • Interior trim, paint, and flooring

Not Included (Extra Cost)

  • Kitchen or bathroom fixtures and finishes
  • Custom cabinetry and millwork
  • Landscaping restoration
  • Driveway modifications
  • Zoning variance or Committee of Adjustment fees
  • Temporary accommodation during construction

Home Additions Costs in Nearby Cities

Money-Saving Tips

Second-storey additions cost more per sq ft but don't require new foundation — compare total cost.

Design to municipal setback limits upfront — Committee of Adjustment variances cost $5,000-$15,000.

Coordinate all trades before starting — sequencing errors in additions cascade into weeks of delays.

Include a 20% contingency for additions — hidden conditions in the existing structure always appear.

Permits take 4-12 weeks in the GTA — start the application before finalizing contractor timelines.

Home Additions Cost FAQs — Toronto

How much does home additions cost in Toronto?

Home Additions in Toronto typically starts at $200 and ranges up to $400 per sq ft. Toronto prices are at the Ontario baseline due to higher demand and labour costs in City of Toronto.

Do I need a permit for home additions in Toronto?

Permit requirements for home additions in Toronto follow City of Toronto guidelines. Toronto permit fees based on project value (typically $12-$15 per $1,000 of construction value).

How long does home additions take in Toronto?

Home Additions in Toronto typically takes 3-6 months. Toronto project timelines can be affected by City of Toronto permit processing times (typically 2-8 weeks) and seasonal demand. Plan ahead for spring and summer, when contractor availability is tighter.

Is home additions cheaper in Toronto than Toronto?

Toronto is the baseline for Ontario renovation pricing. Prices here reflect the highest labour costs in the GTA, but also the widest selection of experienced contractors and specialists.

What should I budget for home additions contingency in Toronto?

We recommend a 20% contingency on top of your home additions estimate in Toronto. This covers unexpected conditions like hidden water damage, structural issues, or material price changes. For a project estimated at $400, set aside an additional $80.

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