| Date | Sunrise | Sunset | Day length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 May 2026, Friday | 6:09 AM | 8:20 PM | 14h 10m |
| 2 May 2026, Saturday | 6:07 AM | 8:21 PM | 14h 13m |
| 3 May 2026, Sunday | 6:06 AM | 8:22 PM | 14h 15m |
| 4 May 2026, Monday | 6:05 AM | 8:23 PM | 14h 18m |
| 5 May 2026, Tuesday | 6:03 AM | 8:24 PM | 14h 20m |
| 6 May 2026, Wednesday | 6:02 AM | 8:25 PM | 14h 23m |
| 7 May 2026, Thursday | 6:01 AM | 8:27 PM | 14h 25m |
| 8 May 2026, Friday | 5:59 AM | 8:28 PM | 14h 28m |
| 9 May 2026, Saturday | 5:58 AM | 8:29 PM | 14h 30m |
| 10 May 2026, Sunday | 5:57 AM | 8:30 PM | 14h 32m |
| 11 May 2026, Monday | 5:56 AM | 8:31 PM | 14h 35m |
| 12 May 2026, Tuesday | 5:55 AM | 8:32 PM | 14h 37m |
| 13 May 2026, Wednesday | 5:54 AM | 8:33 PM | 14h 39m |
| 14 May 2026, Thursday | 5:52 AM | 8:34 PM | 14h 42m |
| 15 May 2026, Friday | 5:51 AM | 8:36 PM | 14h 44m |
| 16 May 2026, Saturday | 5:50 AM | 8:37 PM | 14h 46m |
| 17 May 2026, Sunday | 5:49 AM | 8:38 PM | 14h 48m |
| 18 May 2026, Monday | 5:48 AM | 8:39 PM | 14h 50m |
| 19 May 2026, Tuesday | 5:47 AM | 8:40 PM | 14h 52m |
| 20 May 2026, Wednesday | 5:46 AM | 8:41 PM | 14h 54m |
| 21 May 2026, Thursday | 5:46 AM | 8:42 PM | 14h 56m |
| 22 May 2026, Friday | 5:45 AM | 8:43 PM | 14h 58m |
| 23 May 2026, Saturday | 5:44 AM | 8:44 PM | 14h 59m |
| 24 May 2026, Sunday | 5:43 AM | 8:45 PM | 15h 01m |
| 25 May 2026, Monday | 5:42 AM | 8:46 PM | 15h 03m |
| 26 May 2026, Tuesday | 5:42 AM | 8:47 PM | 15h 05m |
| 27 May 2026, Wednesday | 5:41 AM | 8:48 PM | 15h 06m |
| 28 May 2026, Thursday | 5:40 AM | 8:49 PM | 15h 08m |
| 29 May 2026, Friday | 5:40 AM | 8:49 PM | 15h 09m |
| 30 May 2026, Saturday | 5:39 AM | 8:50 PM | 15h 11m |
| 31 May 2026, Sunday | 5:39 AM | 8:51 PM | 15h 12m |
Toronto lies on the northern shore of Lake Ontario, giving the eastern waterfront and the Scarborough Bluffs an open horizon over the water toward the sunrise. The western waterfront and the Toronto Islands face southwest across the open lake, making them the best areas for sunset.
This south-facing sandy beach on the Inner Harbour, about 4 km east of Union Station, has an unobstructed horizon over Lake Ontario. Free parking on Cherry Street; arriving 20 minutes before sunrise leaves enough time to find a spot.
Sandstone cliffs rising 90 m above Lake Ontario on the city's eastern edge, roughly 25 km from downtown. Bluffer's Park at the base has a beach and free parking; the clifftop view is accessible via Scarborough Crescent Park on the plateau above.
A 2 km sandy beach in the east end at Queen Street East and Coxwell Avenue, facing south-southeast over Lake Ontario with an open waterline. TTC streetcar 501 stops at Woodbine; free parking is available off Lake Shore Boulevard East.
A 5 km spit extending southeast into Lake Ontario, with the city skyline to the northwest and open water to the east. On weekends the main gate on Leslie Street opens at dawn; entry is free on foot and by bike.
From the western edge of the spit, the city skyline sits in the foreground as the sun sets over the lake behind it. A free shuttle runs from the gate on busy days; the park closes at dusk.
This park juts into Lake Ontario about 8 km west of downtown, offering an open western horizon with the Humber Bay Arch Bridge in the foreground. Free parking on site; TTC streetcar 501 stops a short walk away on Lake Shore Boulevard.
A west-facing beach on the western tip of the Toronto Islands, looking directly across open Lake Ontario toward the setting sun. The ferry from Jack Layton Ferry Terminal costs CAD 9 return; last ferry runs around 11 PM in summer.
Toronto's largest inner-city park has open views toward Grenadier Pond and the southwestern horizon from the elevated sections near the park's western edge. Closest subway stop is High Park on Line 2; free parking is available on Bloor Street West.