: SiteWire
SiteWire / Blog Start free trial
Permit Activity

Building Permit Activity & Wait Times in Toronto (2026)

102,193
permits (24 mo)
$24.55B
total project value
4,088
permits / month
28
median wait days

Over the trailing 24 months, 102,193 building permits were issued in Toronto, ON, representing $24.55B in declared project value, an average of 4,088 permits per month. For contractors, suppliers, and trades, that volume is the real signal: it's the pipeline of projects breaking ground in Toronto that you can be bidding on. Permits here also took a median of 28 days (average 69.3 days) from application to issuance, so you can time outreach to when a project is actually moving.

Toronto permit activity at a glance

MetricValue
Permits issued (last 24 months)102,193
Total declared project value$24.55B
Average permits per month4,088
Average project value$659K
Median days to issuance28 days
Average days to issuance69.3 days
Cross-city median (6 timing cities)28 days

Permit volume trend in Toronto

The busiest single month was Oct 2024 (5,863 permits). Volume isn't flat, application activity rises in spring and summer, which is exactly when the project pipeline is deepest and competition for trades is highest. Tracking the month-over-month curve lets you staff and bid ahead of the surge instead of chasing it.

Permit activity by type of work in Toronto

Where the work actually is matters more than any headline. Here are the most common permit categories in Toronto over the last 24 months, ranked by volume, with the average project value and wait time for each, so you can see which segments are both active and worth chasing:

Type of work Permits Avg value Median days
Building Permit Related(PS) 20,402 $4K 30
Building Permit Related(MS) 19,099 $1.2M 33
Interior Alterations 13,907 $374K 25
Building Permit Related (DR) 7,325 n/a 34
Multiple Projects 7,042 $260K 27
Back Water Valve (Sewer only) 5,756 $4K 1
New Building 4,580 $3.6M 61
Demolition 2,588 $8K 69
Sign Building Permit Related 2,525 $6K 9
New Laneway / Rear Yard Suite 1,481 $215K 67
Addition(s) 1,346 $285K 46
Other(SR) 1,303 $59K 16

How Toronto wait times compare

The median across the 6 cities with published processing-time data is 28 days. Toronto sits right at that benchmark. Faster issuance means a shorter gap between a permit being filed and shovels in the ground, and a shorter window to get in front of the owner or GC before a competitor does.

How to use this for Toronto lead generation

A permit is the earliest hard signal that a real, funded project is moving. The contractors who win the work are the ones who reach the owner or general contractor first, usually before the project is publicly visible. The practical play:

About these numbers

These are permit-volume and application-to-issuance timing benchmarks drawn from issued building permits in Toronto. They are not approval rates: the underlying dataset has no approval-versus-denial field, so we never report rejection percentages. Volume and value tell you where the work is; wait times tell you how fast it moves; SiteWire surfaces the individual permits behind these totals so you can act on them.

See the Toronto permits behind these numbers.

SiteWire turns this permit activity into a working lead list, every new Toronto permit with the owner, contractor, work type, and value, plus daily alerts and pre-permit signals. Data kept in Canada. Start a free trial and pull your first Toronto leads today.

Start your free trial

Weekly permit-lead alerts for your trade + city

Get the new building permits worth chasing, matched to your trade and your cities, in a short weekly email. One email to confirm, unsubscribe anytime in one click.

We email a single confirmation link (CASL double opt-in). No spam, one-click unsubscribe on every email.

Compare other cities

See all 31 cities · Back to the blog

Source: Wolf Codes permit dataset, 4,291,388 Canadian building permits. Figures cover the trailing 24 months, analysed June 2026. Permit-volume and (where available) application-to-issuance timing benchmarks from the Wolf Codes permit dataset. The data has no approval/denial column, so these are NOT approval rates — they measure how many permits were issued, their declared value, and how long issued permits took where a processing-time field is published. Only cities with at least 50 qualifying permits are reported.