Restaurant in Toronto, Canada
Antler
210Pearl PointsTwo Michelin Plates. Book it for Canadian contemporary.

About Antler
Antler holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025, making it one of the stronger $$$ bookings in Toronto's contemporary dining scene. With a 4.8 Google rating across nearly 2,800 reviews and a warm, occasion-ready room on Dundas Street West, it delivers Michelin-recognised cooking without the $$$$ price tag. Book a week to two weeks ahead for weekends.
Antler, Toronto — Pearl Verdict
Antler on Dundas Street West has held a Michelin Plate for two consecutive years (2024 and 2025), which puts it in a select tier of Toronto contemporary dining without requiring you to spend at the $$$$ level that defines most of the city's Michelin-recognised rooms. If you are planning a special occasion meal in the west end and want a kitchen with documented credentials at a price point that won't require a second mortgage, Antler is the right call. Book it.
The Room and the Experience
The address — 1454 Dundas Street West , places Antler in Roncesvalles-adjacent Trinity Bellwoods territory, a neighbourhood that has steadily built a serious dining reputation without the Yorkville price premium. The physical space here is scaled for intimacy rather than volume. Dundas West rooms in this bracket tend to run compact and close-set, which works in Antler's favour for date nights and small celebration dinners where the energy of a lively, populated room is preferable to the hushed formality of a $$$$ tasting-menu-only space. This is a room where you feel the occasion without being intimidated by it.
For a special occasion dinner, that calibration matters. If you are choosing between a room that performs ceremony and a room that performs warmth, Antler sits firmly in the second category. That makes it a stronger booking for anniversary dinners, milestone celebrations with a small group, or a serious date where you want the food to do the talking without the surrounding theatre overwhelming the evening. Compare that positioning to Alo, which operates at $$$$ and delivers a more formal tasting-menu experience , Antler at $$$ gives you Michelin-plate credibility with less ceremony and more flexibility.
The Food and the Drinks Program
Antler operates as a contemporary kitchen, which in the Toronto context typically means Canadian-sourced ingredients handled with technique and seasonal discipline. The Michelin Plate designation across two years signals consistent kitchen execution rather than a one-season spike , the inspectors returned, and the rating held. That consistency is the most useful data point when booking for an occasion where the meal cannot be a gamble.
On the drinks side: at a $$$ contemporary room that has held Michelin recognition for two years running, you should expect the bar program to be thoughtfully assembled rather than an afterthought. Toronto's better contemporary kitchens at this tier have increasingly treated the cocktail list as a genuine complement to the food , not just a vehicle for pre-dinner drinks but a considered program that can carry a meal from aperitif through digestif. Without confirmed specifics on individual cocktails or the current list, the practical advice is this: ask your server what the bar is leading with on the night. A kitchen operating at Michelin Plate level generally keeps its drinks program in sync with its food sourcing philosophy. If Antler's food leans Canadian and seasonal, expect the bar to follow suit. For a special occasion, arrive early enough to spend time at the bar before your table , it is likely worth it.
For deeper context on how Toronto's contemporary bar programs compare across the city's dining scene, see our full Toronto bars guide.
Booking and Practical Details
Antler sits at $$$ , broadly in the $60–$100 per head range for a full dinner with drinks in Toronto's current market, though you should confirm current pricing directly. With a Google rating of 4.8 across 2,784 reviews, this is not a venue operating on critical reputation alone; the volume and consistency of that public feedback is a reliable signal that the kitchen delivers night after night, not just for critics. Booking difficulty is moderate, meaning you should not leave this to the day before, particularly for weekends or occasions where timing matters. A week to ten days of lead time is a reasonable minimum; for Saturday dinners tied to a specific date, two to three weeks is safer. Walk-ins may be possible on quieter weeknights, but for a special occasion, confirm your table in advance.
Antler is located on Dundas Street West, well-served by the 505 Dundas streetcar. If you are planning a broader Toronto evening, the neighbourhood offers strong pre- and post-dinner options. For a full picture of what is nearby, our full Toronto restaurants guide and our full Toronto experiences guide are useful starting points.
If you are visiting Toronto from out of town and want hotel options nearby or in the broader city, see our full Toronto hotels guide. For wine-focused travellers, our full Toronto wineries guide covers the regional picture.
How Antler Fits the Canadian Contemporary Scene
Antler holds its own in the national conversation. For reference points elsewhere in Canada: Tanière³ in Quebec City operates at a comparable level of Canadian-sourced contemporary cooking with strong tasting-menu credentials. AnnaLena in Vancouver is a useful west-coast peer in terms of format and price positioning. Jérôme Ferrer - Europea in Montreal represents a more formal step up. Within Ontario, Restaurant Pearl Morissette in Lincoln and The Pine in Creemore offer regional contemporary cooking worth knowing about if you are exploring beyond Toronto. Internationally, César in New York City and Jungsik in Seoul provide reference points for what Michelin-recognised contemporary kitchens deliver at comparable and higher tiers.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Does Antler handle dietary restrictions? A Michelin Plate kitchen with a 4.8 Google rating across nearly 2,800 reviews almost certainly accommodates common restrictions , the volume and consistency of positive feedback suggests the kitchen is responsive to dietary needs. That said, call or email ahead for anything specific. Do not assume on the night, particularly for allergies that require kitchen-level attention.
- What should I wear to Antler? At $$$ with Michelin Plate recognition in a Dundas West room, smart casual is the right call. You do not need a jacket, but this is not a jeans-and-sneakers dinner. Treat it like a serious night out rather than a formal occasion. The neighbourhood and price point both point in the same direction: dressed well, not dressed up.
- What should I order at Antler? Specific menu items are not confirmed in our database, so we will not invent them. What the Michelin Plate credential tells you is that the kitchen's core dishes are reliably executed. Ask your server what the kitchen is leading with on the night , at a contemporary room at this level, the answer to that question will steer you correctly.
- Is the tasting menu worth it at Antler? At $$$ with two consecutive Michelin Plates, a tasting menu format (if available) represents good value relative to the $$$$ rooms like Alo where the same credential tier costs significantly more. If the format is offered and you are celebrating an occasion, it is the right way to experience the kitchen at its full range. Confirm availability when booking.
- What are alternatives to Antler in Toronto? Within Toronto's contemporary dining tier, Grey Gardens and FK are worth comparing at similar price points. Aloette offers a more casual entry into the Alo group at a lower price. Restaurant 20 Victoria is a strong option for a more formal occasion. For a full overview, see our full Toronto restaurants guide. For Canadian contemporary cooking outside the city, Narval in Rimouski is a notable outlier.
- Is Antler good for a special occasion? Yes, with the right expectations. This is the correct booking if you want a Michelin-recognised kitchen, a warm rather than formal room, and a $$$ price point that keeps the evening special without requiring a $$$$ commitment. For a more ceremonial occasion where the full tasting-menu format and $$$$ spend are appropriate, Alo is the alternative to consider. For most anniversary or celebration dinners in the west end of Toronto, Antler is the sharper choice.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Antler handle dietary restrictions?
Contact Antler directly before booking — at the $$$ price point, contemporary kitchens at Michelin Plate level typically accommodate dietary needs with advance notice. The menu format (contemporary Canadian) generally involves protein-forward cooking, so vegetarian or vegan diners should flag requirements early. Don't assume flexibility without confirming.
What should I wear to Antler?
Antler is on Dundas Street West in a neighbourhood that skews creative and casual, but the Michelin Plate recognition and $$$ pricing signal a room where guests dress with some intention. Think polished casual — clean, put-together, no need for a jacket. Overdressing is unlikely to be a problem either.
What should I order at Antler?
Specific menu items aren't confirmed in available data, so check their current menu before visiting. What is consistent with Antler's contemporary Canadian positioning is a focus on Canadian-sourced ingredients handled with technique — lean into whatever the kitchen is featuring seasonally rather than anchoring to a single dish.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Antler?
At $$$, Antler is broadly in the $60–$100 per head range for dinner with drinks — competitive for a venue holding consecutive Michelin Plates in 2024 and 2025. If the tasting menu format suits you, this is one of the more credentialled options at that price in Toronto. For a la carte flexibility at a similar tier, Edulis is worth comparing.
What are alternatives to Antler in Toronto?
Edulis on Niagara Street is the closest comparison for technique-driven, ingredient-focused cooking at a similar price. Alo operates at a higher price point with more formal tasting menu structure. Aburi Hana suits diners who want Japanese precision over Canadian contemporary. If budget is a factor, Antler's Michelin Plate standing makes it one of the stronger value cases in the $$$ tier.
Is Antler good for a special occasion?
Yes — two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) give it the credibility to anchor a birthday, anniversary, or client dinner without explanation. The Dundas West location adds a neighbourhood feel that works better for occasions where you want atmosphere without the stiffness of a hotel dining room. Book ahead; this is not a walk-in situation for a planned event.
Location
1454 Dundas St W, Toronto, ON M6J 1Y6, Canada
Toronto, Canada
Compare Antler
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Antler | Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | $$$ | — |
| Alo | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Sushi Masaki Saito | Michelin 2 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Aburi Hana | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Don Alfonso 1890 | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Edulis | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ | — |
What to weigh when choosing between Antler and alternatives.
Also Consider
- Alo — Contemporary, $$$$
- Sushi Masaki Saito — Sushi, Japanese, $$$$
- Aburi Hana — Kaiseki, Japanese, $$$$
- Don Alfonso 1890 — Contemporary Italian, Italian, $$$$
- Edulis — Canadian, Mediterranean Cuisine, $$$$
Antler sits one price tier below most of its Michelin-recognised peers in Toronto, and that gap is the most important factor when deciding where to book. Alo is the city's reference point for $$$$ contemporary dining — tasting menu-only, formal, and harder to book, with credentials that exceed Antler's Plate designation. If budget is not a constraint and you want the full ceremony, book Alo. If you want Michelin recognition at $$$ with a room that feels celebratory rather than ceremonial, Antler is the practical choice.
Edulis at $$$$ offers Canadian and Mediterranean-influenced cooking with a similarly intimate scale, and is worth considering if you want more menu range and are prepared to spend more. Don Alfonso 1890 at $$$$ sits at the formal end of the Toronto contemporary spectrum — correct for a business dinner or high-ceremony occasion, less suited to the relaxed celebration where Antler performs well. Sushi Masaki Saito and Aburi Hana are both $$$$ and Japanese in format — they are not direct competitors to Antler, but if your group is split between cuisines, both are worth knowing as Toronto's top-tier alternatives in a different direction.
The practical summary: for a special occasion dinner where the $$$$ rooms feel like too much spend or too much formality, Antler is the most defensible $$$ booking in Toronto's Michelin-recognised contemporary tier. It books at moderate difficulty — easier than Alo, harder than walk-in neighbourhood options. If Antler is full on your date, Edulis is the closest peer in terms of occasion suitability, though at a higher price point.
Recognized By
Explore Toronto
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