Browse retail properties for sale and lease across Ontario, including storefronts, plazas, shopping centres, service-commercial spaces, restaurants, medical retail, and investment opportunities.

Ontario Retail Properties

Explore available retail properties in Ontario, including retail spaces for lease, buildings for sale, plaza units, storefronts, service-commercial properties, mixed-use retail, restaurant-ready spaces, and investment assets.

Listings may include small retail units, end-cap spaces, street-front storefronts, neighbourhood plazas, shopping centre units, medical or dental retail spaces, food-service locations, and properties with redevelopment or repositioning potential.

Browse Available Retail Properties in Ontario

Retail Properties in Ontario

Retail properties in Ontario can support a wide range of businesses, including shops, restaurants, cafés, salons, clinics, pharmacies, fitness studios, showrooms, service businesses, franchises, convenience uses, and specialty commercial operations.

But retail real estate is not just about visibility.

A retail property needs to support the business model. Buyers and tenants should evaluate zoning, permitted use, signage, parking, frontage, access, foot traffic, co-tenancy, loading, utilities, ventilation, plumbing, accessibility, lease terms, build-out cost, and customer flow before committing.

A space that looks attractive online can become a problem if the use is not permitted, parking is limited, signage is weak, the layout does not work, utilities are insufficient, or the required build-out costs more than expected.

OntarioCRE helps clients evaluate retail properties across Ontario based on practical business, real estate, construction, and investment considerations.

Types of Retail Properties in Ontario

Retail properties vary significantly depending on location, format, size, tenant mix, infrastructure, and intended use.

Common retail property types include:

  • Street-front retail spaces
  • Plaza retail units
  • Shopping centre spaces
  • Neighbourhood commercial properties
  • Service-commercial spaces
  • Mixed-use retail units
  • Restaurant and food-service spaces
  • Medical and dental retail spaces
  • Pharmacy locations
  • Salon and personal-service spaces
  • Fitness and wellness spaces
  • Showroom properties
  • Franchise locations
  • Retail investment properties
  • Redevelopment or repositioning opportunities

Each retail use has different requirements. A restaurant may need exhaust, plumbing, grease interceptor capacity, patio permissions, parking, and food-service zoning. A medical or dental clinic may need accessibility, plumbing, patient flow, and parking. A showroom may need visibility, loading, storage, and signage. A small service business may need local traffic, convenience, and flexible lease terms.

Do not evaluate retail properties by square footage alone. The space needs to support the actual business.

Retail Properties for Sale in Ontario

Buying a retail property in Ontario can make sense for owner-users, investors, landlords, franchise operators, service businesses, and buyers looking for long-term control over a commercial location.

Before buying a retail property, review:

  • Zoning and permitted use
  • Existing tenants and leases
  • Income quality
  • Parking availability
  • Signage rights
  • Frontage and visibility
  • Customer access
  • Loading or delivery access
  • Building condition
  • Roof, HVAC, plumbing, and electrical systems
  • Washrooms and accessibility
  • Environmental risk
  • Future repair costs
  • Redevelopment or expansion potential
  • Financing and appraisal assumptions

The purchase price is only part of the decision. A retail property can look affordable but become expensive if the building needs major repairs, the leases are weak, the tenant mix is unstable, the zoning is limited, or the space cannot support future leasing demand.

Retail Space for Lease in Ontario

Leasing retail space may be the right choice for businesses that need location, visibility, customer access, and flexibility without purchasing the property.

Before leasing retail space, tenants should review:

  • Base rent and additional rent
  • Lease term and renewal options
  • Permitted use
  • Exclusivity rights
  • Signage rights
  • Parking availability
  • Operating hours
  • Co-tenancy and neighbouring uses
  • Utilities and servicing
  • HVAC responsibility
  • Plumbing and washroom requirements
  • Ventilation or food-service requirements
  • Landlord work and tenant improvement responsibilities
  • Assignment and sublease rights
  • Restoration clauses

The wrong retail lease can hurt the business before it opens. If the lease does not support the intended use, build-out, signage, access, or customer flow, the space may become a liability instead of an asset.

Location, Visibility, and Customer Access

Retail location matters because the property needs to connect with the target customer base.

Some businesses depend on walk-in traffic. Others depend on drive-by visibility, parking, neighbourhood convenience, highway access, appointment-based visits, or destination demand.

Important location factors include:

  • Street exposure
  • Signage visibility
  • Pedestrian traffic
  • Vehicle traffic
  • Parking availability
  • Access from major roads
  • Transit access
  • Nearby residential density
  • Nearby employment areas
  • Co-tenants and neighbouring businesses
  • Customer demographics
  • Delivery and loading access
  • Competition nearby
  • Future development in the area

A retail space with cheap rent may not be cheap if customers cannot find it, parking is poor, signage is weak, or the location does not match the business model.

Zoning and Permitted Retail Uses

Zoning should be reviewed before buying or leasing a retail property.

Not every retail space can support every retail use. Some properties may allow general retail but restrict restaurants, medical clinics, cannabis retail, automotive uses, daycare, fitness, entertainment, places of worship, outdoor patios, or high-intensity service uses.

Buyers and tenants should confirm:

  • Whether the intended retail use is permitted
  • Whether restaurant or food-service use is allowed
  • Whether medical, dental, or clinic use is permitted
  • Whether personal-service uses are permitted
  • Whether automotive or specialty uses are restricted
  • Whether outdoor patio use is allowed
  • Whether parking requirements can be met
  • Whether signage is permitted
  • Whether loading or delivery needs are allowed
  • Whether waste, ventilation, or equipment requirements create issues
  • Whether site plan or building permit review may apply

If the zoning does not support the intended use, the property may not be viable regardless of location, rent, or purchase price.

Retail Build-Out and Construction Considerations

Retail build-out costs can change the economics of a lease or purchase quickly.

A space may require improvements for layout, flooring, lighting, washrooms, accessibility, HVAC, plumbing, electrical capacity, signage, storefront work, fire and life safety, demising walls, security, millwork, equipment, or customer-facing finishes.

Build-out considerations may include:

  • Demolition and interior layout
  • Flooring and finishes
  • Washrooms and accessibility
  • HVAC capacity
  • Plumbing requirements
  • Electrical upgrades
  • Lighting
  • Fire and life safety systems
  • Signage and storefront improvements
  • Grease interceptor or exhaust requirements for food uses
  • Medical or dental plumbing requirements
  • Security systems
  • Permits and inspections
  • Landlord work vs. tenant work
  • Construction timeline and contingency

OntarioCRE brings a construction-informed perspective to help clients evaluate whether a retail property can support the intended build-out before they commit.

A space can be well located and still fail if the construction scope, permit path, or improvement cost is underestimated.

Restaurant, Food-Service, and Specialty Retail Spaces

Some retail spaces require deeper review because the business use is more complex.

Restaurants, cafés, bakeries, quick-service food, medical clinics, dental offices, pharmacies, salons, fitness studios, and specialty-use retail spaces may require infrastructure that a standard retail unit does not have.

Important review items include:

  • Ventilation and exhaust
  • Plumbing and drainage
  • Electrical capacity
  • HVAC systems
  • Grease interceptor requirements
  • Washroom requirements
  • Accessibility
  • Waste handling
  • Fire and life safety
  • Equipment layout
  • Customer flow
  • Parking and loading
  • Signage
  • Permitted use
  • Build-out cost

A basic retail unit is not automatically restaurant-ready, clinic-ready, or salon-ready. The property must support the real operating requirements of the business.

Retail Investment Properties in Ontario

Retail properties can be attractive investment assets when they have strong tenants, durable locations, practical layouts, clean leases, and realistic re-leasing potential.

Before buying a retail investment property, investors should review:

  • Tenant quality
  • Lease terms
  • Renewal options
  • Rental rates compared with market
  • Additional rent recovery
  • Vacancy risk
  • Co-tenancy risk
  • Net operating income
  • Building condition
  • Roof, HVAC, plumbing, and electrical systems
  • Parking and access
  • Zoning and permitted uses
  • Re-leasing potential
  • Future capital expenditures
  • Financing assumptions
  • Exit strategy

Do not rely only on cap rate. A retail property can look strong until a tenant leaves and the space proves difficult to re-lease because of poor layout, limited parking, weak signage, dated condition, or restricted permitted uses.

Retail Redevelopment and Repositioning Opportunities

Some retail properties may support redevelopment, repositioning, or adaptive reuse.

Potential strategies may include:

  • Re-tenanting older plaza units
  • Converting retail space to medical or dental use
  • Adding food-service or service-commercial tenants
  • Repositioning storefronts for specialty users
  • Converting underused retail to mixed commercial use
  • Redeveloping older commercial sites
  • Improving signage, parking, access, or façade
  • Creating owner-user retail space

These opportunities require careful review. A repositioning strategy may require zoning confirmation, site plan review, building permits, accessibility upgrades, HVAC work, plumbing upgrades, parking review, fire and life safety improvements, or lease restructuring.

A retail repositioning only works if the final use, approval path, construction cost, tenant demand, and rental assumptions support the strategy.

Ontario Retail Property Markets

Retail availability, pricing, customer demand, parking, visibility, lease rates, and development constraints vary by location.

Browse retail and commercial real estate opportunities across OntarioCRE’s active markets:

Related Ontario Commercial Property Types

Retail buyers, tenants, and investors often compare related property types depending on business use, customer base, infrastructure needs, and investment strategy.

Common Mistakes When Evaluating Retail Properties

Retail property mistakes usually come from focusing on rent, price, or frontage while ignoring the actual business requirements.

Common mistakes include:

  • Choosing a retail space before confirming zoning
  • Ignoring parking requirements
  • Underestimating build-out costs
  • Assuming food-service use is automatically allowed
  • Ignoring HVAC, plumbing, electrical, and ventilation needs
  • Overestimating walk-in traffic
  • Underestimating signage importance
  • Signing a lease without understanding additional rent
  • Ignoring exclusivity clauses or use restrictions
  • Buying a retail investment without testing re-leasing demand
  • Assuming a strong area makes every retail unit viable
  • Ignoring accessibility and permit requirements

A serious retail property search should test whether the space works for the business, not just whether it looks good in a listing.

Ready to Find the Right Retail Property in Ontario?

Retail properties require more than a listing search. Zoning, visibility, parking, signage, customer access, lease terms, building condition, infrastructure, build-out cost, and long-term business needs all need to work together.

OntarioCRE combines commercial real estate advisory with construction-informed insight to help clients evaluate retail properties for purchase, lease, investment, build-out, repositioning, or redevelopment.

Contact OntarioCRE to discuss retail property opportunities in Ontario.

Frequently Asked Questions About Retail Properties in Ontario

What should I look for in an Ontario retail property?

Key factors include zoning, permitted use, location, visibility, signage, parking, customer access, lease terms, additional rent, building condition, utilities, HVAC, plumbing, electrical capacity, and whether the space supports the intended business.

Can any retail space be used for a restaurant?

No. Restaurant use may require zoning permission, ventilation, exhaust, plumbing, grease interceptor capacity, fire and life safety review, parking, waste handling, and building permits. A standard retail unit is not automatically restaurant-ready.

Is parking important for retail properties in Ontario?

Yes. Parking can directly affect customer convenience, staff access, delivery activity, and municipal compliance. Some businesses can operate with limited parking, but many retail, medical, restaurant, and service uses need practical parking to function.

Should I buy or lease a retail property in Ontario?

Buying may make sense for owner-users or investors seeking long-term control, equity, and stability. Leasing may be better for businesses that need flexibility, lower upfront capital, or a specific customer-facing location without owning the property.

What makes a retail property a good investment?

A strong retail investment usually has durable location demand, quality tenants, clear lease terms, recoverable expenses, good parking and access, practical layouts, strong signage, manageable capital repairs, and realistic re-leasing potential.

Continue Your Retail Property Search

Not seeing the right retail property in Ontario yet?

Use the OntarioCRE Property Directory to browse more commercial property opportunities across Ontario, including retail spaces, restaurants, shopping centre units, medical spaces, office properties, investment assets, and specialty commercial real estate.