In most Toronto neighbourhoods, yes. A garden suite is a detached residential unit built in the backyard of an existing property – and the City of Toronto now permits them as-of-right on most residential lots across the city. For homeowners, that means a legal, self-contained unit in the backyard: rental income, housing for family members, or flexible space that adds long-term value to the property.
Quadrant Architects designs garden suites in Toronto from feasibility through to building permit. We’re licensed by the Ontario Association of Architects (OAA) and work directly with the City of Toronto’s garden suite bylaw requirements — angular plane rules, setback restrictions, maximum size and height limits – on every project we take on.
A garden suite is a self-contained residential dwelling unit located in the rear yard of a property, separate from the main house. It has its own entrance, kitchen, bathroom, and living space. Unlike a basement apartment or laneway house, a garden suite is a detached structure — built independently from the main building and positioned in the backyard. A garden suite is a form of accessory dwelling unit (ADU) permitted in Toronto’s residential zones — the terms garden suite, backyard suite, and ADU refer to the same type of housing; the City of Toronto uses ‘garden suite’ in its zoning bylaw.
Homeowners often start by speaking with a Toronto garden suite architect to determine whether their lot qualifies — lot dimensions, rear yard depth, existing coverage, and heritage status all affect eligibility before a single drawing is produced.
The City of Toronto introduced garden suite permissions in 2022 as part of its broader strategy to increase gentle density in established residential neighbourhoods — through its Expanding Housing Options in Neighbourhoods (EHON) initiative [link to: https://www.toronto.ca/city-government/planning-development/planning-studies-initiatives/expanding-housing-options-in-neighbourhoods/]. The policy allows homeowners to add a second dwelling unit in their backyard without requiring a rezoning application, a Committee of Adjustment hearing, or a minor variance — provided the design meets the city’s specific bylaw requirements.
Homeowners looking to build a garden suite in Toronto must comply with setback, angular plane, lot coverage, and servicing requirements that vary by property – a feasibility review confirms what’s achievable on a specific lot before any design begins.
Garden suites are sometimes confused with laneway suites. The distinction matters:
Both are permitted in Toronto. Which one applies to your property depends on whether your lot has rear lane access. Many Toronto lots qualify for one but not the other; some qualify for both.
| Regulation | City of Toronto Requirement |
|---|---|
| Maximum size | Up to 60 square metres of gross floor area (GFA) - approximately 645 square feet |
| Maximum height | 6 metres to the peak for a flat or shed roof; 9 metres for a pitched roof |
| Rear yard setback | Minimum 1.5 metres from the rear property line |
| Side yard setback | Minimum 1.5 metres from the side property line |
| Setback from main house | Minimum 5 metres between the garden suite and the rear wall of the main dwelling |
| Lot coverage | Garden suite footprint counts toward total lot coverage; city-wide maximums still apply |
| Angular plane | A 45-degree angular plane applies from the side property lines, limiting how the building envelope can extend at height - a key constraint on two-storey designs |
| Storeys permitted | Up to two storeys |
| Parking | No additional parking is required for a garden suite |
| Lot eligibility | Must have a residential zone designation; minimum rear yard depth required to meet setback requirements |
The City of Toronto introduced garden suite permissions in 2022 under its Expanding Housing Options in Neighbourhoods (EHON) initiative -the same policy framework that permits multiplex housing citywide. Garden suite permissions apply within the City of Toronto boundary. Properties in Mississauga, Markham, Vaughan, and other GTA municipalities are governed by separate bylaws. If your property is outside Toronto, we confirm applicable permissions during the feasibility review.
A garden suite is a complete, self-contained dwelling – not a shed conversion or a prefab module dropped in a yard. Every design has to satisfy Toronto’s zoning bylaw requirements, the Ontario Building Code, and the practical requirements of someone living in the unit year-round.
The angular plane restriction is the constraint that most surprises homeowners. On a standard Toronto lot, the 45- degree angular plane measured from each side property line can significantly limit the vertical massing of a two- storey garden suite – particularly on lots under 7.5 metres wide. A typical East York lot, for instance, often supports a one- storey garden suite more easily than a two- storey design precisely because of this restriction – the angular plane cuts into the upper floor area to the point where a single well- designed storey delivers more usable space than a cramped two- storey attempt. We work through this in early concept design so the massing is resolved before detailed drawings begin. On a recent project in Leslieville, the angular plane constraint shaped the entire roof form of the garden suite – a shed roof sloping away from the neighbour’s property line was the design solution that maximized interior volume within the bylaw envelope.
Garden suites fall under Part 9 of the Ontario Building Code in most configurations – the same code path as detached houses. This governs structural requirements, minimum ceiling heights, window sizes for egress and natural light, insulation, and mechanical systems. The unit needs to function as a year- round dwelling: adequate heating, ventilation, and insulation standards are not optional.
Connecting the garden suite to water, sewer, and electrical services is one of the most variable cost factors in any project. In some cases the existing service lateral from the street has enough capacity to serve both the main house and the garden suite on a shared connection. In others, a separate connection is required. We identify the servicing approach during feasibility – this significantly affects overall project cost and is worth knowing before committing to design.
In many Toronto neighbourhoods with good transit access – particularly those within 500 metres of a subway station or 800 metres of a light rail stop – parking requirements for multiplex buildings are reduced or eliminated. We confirm this in the feasibility phase, since parking determines whether a three-storey fourplex is even achievable on the lot.
Multiplex projects typically require structural engineering (for new builds or significant additions), mechanical and plumbing coordination for separate unit services, and sometimes geotechnical reports. We coordinate these consultants and integrate their requirements into the permit drawings – so the submission is complete on first review rather than triggering rounds of additional information requests.
The City of Toronto has released a set of pre-approved garden suite plans – standardized designs that have already passed zoning and building code review. Homeowners can use these plans to potentially streamline permit review, since the design itself doesn’t need to be re- evaluated by an examiner.
Pre-approved plans sound appealing but come with real limitations:
These are reference ranges, not quotes. Every project is different, and costs depend on site- specific conditions that can only be assessed through a proper feasibility review and preliminary design. We don’t provide cost estimates without first understanding what’s involved on the specific property.
One financial consideration worth noting: garden suites are eligible for CMHC’s MLI Select program and certain municipal financing programs in some cases. A mortgage broker or financial advisor familiar with residential intensification projects is the right person to assess financing options specific to your situation.
On many Toronto properties, a garden suite is not the only intensification option. If the main house also qualifies for a multiplex conversion – a duplex, triplex, or fourplex – the two can be designed as part of an integrated project. A triplex in the main house plus a garden suite in the backyard can create four or five dwelling units on a standard Toronto lot.
We assess the full potential of each property during the feasibility review – what the main building can support, whether the rear yard qualifies for a garden suite, and whether designing both simultaneously makes sense from a cost and permitting perspective.
Q: What is the maximum size of a garden suite in Toronto?
A: The City of Toronto permits garden suites up to 60 square metres of gross floor area – approximately 645 square feet. This applies to the total floor area across all storeys; a two- storey garden suite must still fit within this maximum. The 60- square- metre limit applies to the gross floor area of the unit, not just the footprint. On many lots, the angular plane restriction and setback requirements make the maximum size difficult to achieve even when the lot technically qualifies.
Q: Do I need an architect to build a garden suite in Toronto?
A: An architect is not always legally required for a garden suite, since most fall under Part 9 of the Ontario Building Code where BCIN-registered designers can prepare drawings. However, the City of Toronto’s garden suite bylaw involves specific angular plane calculations, setback requirements, and site- specific zoning conditions that require careful interpretation. Working with an OAA-licensed architect reduces the risk of permit deficiencies, ensures the design is optimized within the bylaw envelope, and produces drawings that are less likely to trigger multiple rounds of examiner comments.
Q: How long does a garden suite permit take in Toronto?
A: Permit review timelines for garden suites at the City of Toronto’s Building Division typically run 8 to 14 weeks for complete submissions on straightforward projects. Projects involving heritage properties, tree protection issues, or unusual site conditions take longer. The most common cause of delays is an incomplete or non- compliant initial submission – examiner comments require revised drawings, which reset the review timeline. We prepare submissions to minimize the frequency of deficiency responses.
Q: Can I rent out my garden suite in Toronto?
A: Yes. Garden suites are permitted as rental units and are subject to standard Ontario residential tenancy law – the Residential Tenancies Act governs the landlord-tenant relationship. There are no short-term rental restrictions specific to garden suites beyond the city’s general short-term rental rules, which require the principal residence to be the host’s primary home. As a long-term rental unit, a garden suite operates under the same legal framework as any other residential rental property in Ontario.
Q: How much does it cost to build a garden suite in Toronto?
A: Construction costs for garden suites in Toronto typically range from $250,000 to $450,000 or more, depending on size, design complexity, foundation type, finishes, and site- specific servicing requirements. This range is a planning reference point – not a quote. Actual costs depend on conditions that can only be assessed through a proper feasibility review and preliminary design. Servicing upgrades, tree protection measures, and geotechnical requirements can add significant cost on specific properties.
Q: What is the difference between a garden suite and a laneway suite in Toronto?
A: Both are detached backyard dwelling units, but they differ in one key way: a laneway suite has rear lane access and faces the lane; a garden suite does not have rear lane access and is accessed through the side yard or from the front of the property. The zoning regulations, setback requirements, and design considerations differ between the two. If your lot has rear lane access, you may qualify for a laneway suite. If it doesn’t, a garden suite is the applicable option. Some lots with rear lanes may qualify for either – we confirm which applies during the feasibility review.
Q: Can I build a two-storey garden suite in Toronto?
A: Yes – the City of Toronto permits garden suites up to two storeys and 6 metres in height (9 metres for pitched roofs). However, the angular plane restriction measured from the side property lines can significantly reduce the buildable volume of a two- storey design on narrower lots. A two-storey garden suite on a 25- foot lot requires careful massing work to stay within the angular plane envelope while achieving livable floor areas on both levels. We work through this during concept design so you know what’s realistically achievable before committing to a two-storey approach.
Q: Is a garden suite the same as an accessory dwelling unit (ADU)?
A: Yes – garden suite, backyard suite, and accessory dwelling unit (ADU) all refer to the same type of housing. The City of Toronto uses ‘garden suite’ in its zoning bylaw. ‘ADU’ is the broader planning term used across North America for the same concept. ‘Backyard suite’ is informal but commonly used. Regardless of the term, the City of Toronto’s garden suite bylaw regulations are what govern design and permitting within the city.
Before designing a garden suite, you need to know whether your rear yard can actually support one within the city’s bylaw requirements. We review lot dimensions, zoning, existing coverage, servicing, and heritage conditions to confirm what’s achievable – before any design fees are committed.
Contact Quadrant Architects to book a feasibility review for your property.
Every member of our team has advanced education in architecture and design

M.Arch Architect, OAA
Principal

M.Arch.BCIN
Principal

M.Arch.BCIN
Principal