Explore available restaurant properties in Ontario, including restaurant spaces for lease, buildings for sale, quick-service restaurant locations, café spaces, commercial kitchens, food-service units, and restaurant investment properties.
Listings may include second-generation restaurant spaces, plaza restaurant units, street-front food-service spaces, freestanding restaurant buildings, drive-thru opportunities, ghost kitchen spaces, and commercial properties with restaurant or food-service potential.
Listings may include properties currently used for food service, previously used for food service, or potentially suitable for food-related uses subject to zoning, landlord approval, public health requirements, building permits, and due diligence.
Restaurant properties in Ontario can support many food-service concepts, including full-service restaurants, quick-service restaurants, cafés, bakeries, takeout businesses, franchise locations, bars, commercial kitchens, catering operations, and specialty food uses.
But restaurant real estate is not standard retail space.
A restaurant property needs to support the actual food-service operation. Buyers and tenants should evaluate zoning, permitted use, exhaust, ventilation, plumbing, grease interceptor requirements, electrical capacity, gas service, parking, signage, loading, waste handling, accessibility, fire and life safety, lease terms, build-out costs, and customer flow before committing.
A space that looks good online can become expensive quickly if it is not restaurant-ready, if the landlord does not allow the use, if ventilation is missing, if plumbing is inadequate, or if municipal approvals are more complicated than expected.
OntarioCRE helps clients evaluate restaurant properties across Ontario based on real estate, business, construction, infrastructure, and operational requirements.
Restaurant properties vary significantly depending on format, infrastructure, location, zoning, customer access, and build-out condition.
Common restaurant property types include:
Each food-service use has different requirements. A full-service restaurant may need dining area, kitchen infrastructure, washrooms, parking, ventilation, and liquor-license considerations. A quick-service restaurant may need visibility, signage, takeout flow, delivery access, and efficient kitchen layout. A bakery may need production space, equipment capacity, ventilation, and display frontage.
Do not evaluate restaurant properties by rent or square footage alone. The infrastructure decides whether the space can actually operate.
Buying a restaurant property in Ontario can make sense for owner-users, investors, operators, franchisees, landlords, and buyers looking for long-term control over a food-service location.
Before buying a restaurant property, review:
The purchase price is only part of the decision. A restaurant property can look affordable but become expensive if major kitchen, ventilation, plumbing, HVAC, fire safety, or accessibility upgrades are required.
Leasing restaurant space may be the right choice for operators who need location, visibility, customer access, and lower upfront real estate capital compared with buying.
Before leasing restaurant space, tenants should review:
The wrong lease can crush a restaurant before it opens. If the space requires expensive upgrades, has unclear landlord responsibilities, restricts the use, or lacks the right infrastructure, the deal may not work even if the location looks attractive.
Second-generation restaurant spaces can be attractive because they may already include kitchen infrastructure, plumbing, exhaust, hood systems, grease interceptor connections, washrooms, dining areas, and food-service layouts.
But “previously used as a restaurant” does not mean the space is ready.
Buyers and tenants should review:
A second-generation restaurant can save time and money if the infrastructure is usable. It can also become a trap if the existing systems are outdated, non-compliant, poorly maintained, or unsuitable for the new concept.
Zoning should be reviewed before buying or leasing a restaurant property.
Not every retail or commercial space allows restaurant use. Some properties may allow general retail but restrict restaurants, takeout food, drive-thru uses, bars, patios, entertainment, late-night operations, outdoor seating, or high-intensity food-service activity.
Buyers and tenants should confirm:
If the intended food-service use is not permitted, the property may not be viable regardless of rent, location, or previous use.
Restaurant properties often require infrastructure that standard retail spaces do not have.
Important infrastructure considerations include:
This is where many restaurant deals fall apart. A space can look perfect from the street but fail because ventilation, grease, plumbing, gas, or electrical requirements are not workable.
Restaurant location matters because customer access affects revenue.
Some restaurants depend on walk-in traffic. Others depend on drive-by visibility, parking, takeout access, delivery access, patio potential, nearby residents, nearby employment, or destination demand.
Important location factors include:
A restaurant with cheap rent may not be cheap if customers cannot park, delivery access is poor, signage is weak, or the site does not match the concept.
Restaurant build-outs can be expensive and complex.
A space may require improvements for kitchen layout, exhaust, plumbing, electrical upgrades, gas lines, grease interceptors, fire suppression, washrooms, accessibility, dining area finishes, flooring, lighting, millwork, signage, security, HVAC, and inspections.
Build-out considerations may include:
OntarioCRE brings a construction-informed perspective to help clients evaluate whether a restaurant property can support the intended concept and build-out before they commit.
A location can be strong and still be the wrong property if the improvement cost destroys the economics.
Restaurant properties can be attractive investment assets when they have strong tenants, long-term leases, practical infrastructure, good visibility, parking, and durable customer demand.
Before buying a restaurant investment property, investors should review:
Do not rely only on cap rate. A restaurant investment can look strong until the tenant leaves and the building proves difficult or expensive to re-lease because the infrastructure is outdated, the layout is too specialized, or the location is weak.
Some restaurant properties may support repositioning, renovation, or redevelopment.
Potential strategies may include:
These opportunities require careful review. A restaurant repositioning strategy may involve zoning confirmation, landlord approval, building permits, health department review, fire and life safety upgrades, accessibility improvements, HVAC work, plumbing upgrades, parking review, and construction budgeting.
A restaurant repositioning only works if the final use, approval path, construction cost, tenant demand, and operating assumptions support the strategy.
Restaurant availability, lease rates, parking, customer traffic, patio potential, and build-out costs vary by location.
Browse restaurant and commercial real estate opportunities across OntarioCRE’s active markets:
Restaurant buyers, tenants, and investors often compare related property types depending on concept, infrastructure needs, customer base, and investment strategy.
Restaurant property mistakes usually come from falling in love with location before testing infrastructure and costs.
Common mistakes include:
A serious restaurant property search should test whether the space can operate profitably, not just whether it looks good to customers.
Restaurant properties require more than a listing search. Zoning, ventilation, exhaust, grease systems, plumbing, electrical capacity, gas service, parking, signage, lease terms, construction costs, and customer access all need to work together.
OntarioCRE combines commercial real estate advisory with construction-informed insight to help clients evaluate restaurant properties for purchase, lease, investment, build-out, repositioning, or redevelopment.
Contact OntarioCRE to discuss restaurant property opportunities in Ontario.
Not seeing the right restaurant property in Ontario yet?
Use the OntarioCRE Property Directory to browse more commercial property opportunities across Ontario, including restaurant spaces, retail properties, shopping centre units, commercial kitchens, investment properties, land, and specialty commercial real estate.