Browse day care space in Ontario, including commercial units, former child care spaces, school-adjacent properties, church properties, retail spaces, office conversions, and commercial sites that require zoning, licensing, parking, drop-off, outdoor play area, washroom, safety, accessibility, and build-out review.

Day Care Space in Ontario

Use the listings section below to browse available day care space, child care properties, commercial spaces suitable for day care use, former day care centres, retail conversion spaces, office conversion properties, church properties, land opportunities, and related commercial real estate across Ontario.

Availability changes frequently based on operator demand, zoning, licensing requirements, property condition, landlord flexibility, and off-market opportunities.

If you do not see the right property listed, contact OntarioCRE to discuss available, upcoming, off-market, conversion-suitable, and build-out-ready day care property opportunities in Ontario.

Browse Available Day Care Spaces in Ontario

Day Care Space in Ontario

Finding the right day care space in Ontario requires more than choosing a vacant commercial unit with enough square footage.

A day care property needs to support zoning, licensing requirements, outdoor play area potential, parking, drop-off and pick-up flow, accessibility, washrooms, classroom layout, staff areas, safety requirements, landlord approvals, building condition, construction cost, and long-term operating needs.

Some day care operators look for former child care centres. Others look at retail units, office conversions, church properties, community buildings, commercial land, mixed-use properties, and school-adjacent spaces.

The risk is assuming a property can become a day care simply because it is available, affordable, or located near families.

OntarioCRE helps operators, landlords, investors, and property owners evaluate day care space in Ontario from both a commercial real estate and construction-informed perspective before leasing, buying, converting, or building out a property.

What Makes a Good Day Care Space?

A good day care space must work for children, parents, staff, regulators, landlords, and the business model.

Important factors include:

  • Permitted day care or child care use
  • Zoning and municipal review
  • Licensing feasibility
  • Indoor classroom layout
  • Outdoor play area potential
  • Safe drop-off and pick-up flow
  • Parking
  • Accessibility
  • Washrooms and handwashing
  • Staff areas
  • Kitchen or food prep needs
  • Storage
  • Security
  • Fire and life-safety requirements
  • Building condition
  • HVAC, plumbing, and electrical capacity
  • Lease terms or purchase structure
  • Landlord approval rights
  • Construction and renovation cost
  • Timeline to open

A property can look attractive online and still fail if zoning, licensing, outdoor space, parking, washrooms, safety, or build-out requirements do not work.

Day Care Space Is Not Standard Commercial Space

Day care space is more sensitive than many other commercial uses.

A retail store, office, church, or community space may be physically large enough, but that does not mean it is suitable for child care.

Before moving forward, review whether the property supports:

  • Child care use under zoning
  • Licensing requirements
  • Child-safe layout
  • Classroom separation
  • Washroom access
  • Outdoor play requirements
  • Parent drop-off and pick-up
  • Staff workflow
  • Accessibility
  • Fire exits and life safety
  • Secure entry and controlled access
  • Parking and traffic flow
  • Noise and neighbourhood compatibility
  • Lease or ownership control
  • Renovation feasibility

The wrong property can create delays, redesign costs, municipal issues, landlord disputes, licensing problems, and opening delays.

OntarioCRE’s Construction-Informed Advantage

OntarioCRE’s value is not only helping clients find day care listings.

Many day care spaces require practical review before a tenant, buyer, or operator commits. A property may need classroom construction, washroom changes, accessibility upgrades, outdoor play improvements, fencing, security, fire-safety upgrades, HVAC review, plumbing work, electrical upgrades, signage approval, and landlord or municipal approvals.

OntarioCRE helps clients think through:

  • Whether the property can support the intended day care use
  • Whether zoning and lease terms align with child care operation
  • Whether the layout can support classrooms, staff areas, washrooms, storage, and circulation
  • Whether parking and drop-off flow are practical
  • Whether outdoor play area potential exists
  • Whether building systems may limit the plan
  • Whether improvements, permits, or approvals may be required
  • Whether the build-out budget is realistic
  • Whether the property supports future growth, assignment, resale, or re-leasing

This matters because a day care space can look affordable at first but become expensive once safety, layout, licensing, accessibility, outdoor space, and construction requirements are reviewed properly.

Common Types of Day Care Space in Ontario

Day care opportunities may come from several property types.

Former Day Care Centres

Former day care centres can be attractive because they may already include classrooms, washrooms, staff areas, outdoor play space, child-safe circulation, and previous child care improvements.

But former day care space is not automatically safe.

Review:

  • Whether the prior use is still permitted
  • Whether licensing requirements have changed
  • Whether the layout still works
  • Whether outdoor play space is acceptable
  • Whether washrooms are suitable
  • Whether fire and life-safety systems are current
  • Whether accessibility is acceptable
  • Whether the lease supports continued day care use
  • Why the previous operator left

A former day care can save time, or it can hide outdated improvements, weak parking, poor layout, licensing issues, or expensive upgrades.

Retail Space for Day Care Use

Retail space may work for day care use when zoning, parking, access, layout, outdoor area, safety, and landlord approvals align.

Potential advantages include:

  • Ground-floor access
  • Visibility
  • Parking
  • Parent convenience
  • Signage
  • Neighbourhood exposure
  • Proximity to families and services

Potential risks include:

  • Limited outdoor play space
  • Drop-off and pick-up conflicts
  • Zoning restrictions
  • Landlord restrictions
  • Washroom upgrades
  • Accessibility upgrades
  • Noise concerns
  • Build-out cost
  • Fire and safety upgrades

Retail space should be reviewed carefully before assuming it can support day care use.

Office Space Conversions

Office space may work for some child care or learning-related uses, but it often needs deeper review.

Potential risks include:

  • Weak outdoor play area potential
  • Limited drop-off flow
  • Poor ground-floor access
  • Washroom limitations
  • Elevator dependency
  • Building restrictions
  • Limited signage
  • Layout inefficiency
  • Fire and life-safety upgrades
  • Accessibility issues

Office space may look clean and professional, but day care use requires a different level of review.

Church and Community Properties

Church properties, community buildings, and institutional-style spaces can sometimes support day care use because they may have assembly areas, classrooms, parking, kitchens, and outdoor areas.

Review:

  • Zoning and permitted use
  • Lease or shared-use restrictions
  • Classroom layout
  • Washrooms
  • Parking and drop-off
  • Outdoor play area
  • Accessibility
  • Fire and life-safety systems
  • Shared access with other users
  • Security and child safety
  • Operating hours

Church or community space can be useful, but shared-use arrangements need clear agreements and operational control.

Commercial Land and Development Sites

Some operators or developers may consider land for purpose-built day care facilities.

Before buying land, review:

  • Zoning
  • Day care use permissions
  • Site size
  • Outdoor play area
  • Parking and drop-off circulation
  • Road access
  • Servicing
  • Grading and drainage
  • Environmental constraints
  • Site plan approval
  • Development charges
  • Construction cost
  • Financing
  • Opening timeline

Purpose-built day care space can offer better long-term control, but land development creates more approval, cost, and timeline risk.

Zoning and Licensing Review

Zoning should be reviewed before signing a lease, buying a property, preparing drawings, or starting renovations.

Do not assume day care use is permitted because a property is commercial, institutional, retail, office, or located near homes.

Before committing, review:

  • Current zoning designation
  • Whether day care or child care use is permitted
  • Whether institutional, school, community, or commercial use applies
  • Parking requirements
  • Drop-off and pick-up requirements
  • Outdoor play area considerations
  • Signage permissions
  • Accessibility requirements
  • Change-of-use requirements
  • Building permit requirements
  • Fire and life-safety requirements
  • Municipal interpretation
  • Landlord or condo restrictions

Licensing requirements should also be reviewed early. A space that looks commercially acceptable may still fail because layout, safety, washrooms, outdoor space, or operating requirements do not support the intended child care model.

Parking, Drop-Off, and Pick-Up Flow

Parking and drop-off are critical for day care space.

Parents and caregivers need safe, convenient access during peak morning and afternoon periods.

Review:

  • Number of parking spaces
  • Staff parking
  • Parent parking
  • Drop-off and pick-up area
  • Traffic circulation
  • Pedestrian safety
  • Visibility from parking to entrance
  • Winter access
  • Accessible parking
  • Distance from parking to entrance
  • Conflicts with other tenants
  • Road access
  • Queuing risk

A space can have enough interior area but still fail if parent drop-off and pick-up are unsafe, inconvenient, or disruptive.

Outdoor Play Area Potential

Outdoor play area potential is one of the most important day care property considerations.

Review:

  • Existing outdoor area
  • Ability to fence the area
  • Safety and supervision
  • Access from classrooms
  • Surface condition
  • Drainage
  • Sun exposure and shade
  • Proximity to parking or traffic
  • Noise and neighbouring uses
  • Landlord approval
  • Municipal requirements
  • Long-term maintenance

If a property has no practical outdoor play solution, the operator must understand that risk before committing.

Layout and Interior Planning

Day care layout affects licensing feasibility, child safety, staff workflow, parent experience, and operating efficiency.

Review whether the space can support:

  • Reception or controlled entry
  • Classrooms
  • Infant, toddler, preschool, or school-age areas, where applicable
  • Washrooms
  • Handwashing areas
  • Staff areas
  • Office space
  • Storage
  • Kitchen or food prep
  • Nap areas, where applicable
  • Indoor play areas
  • Circulation
  • Accessibility
  • Emergency exits
  • Secure access
  • Parent drop-off flow
  • Outdoor play access

A space with the right square footage can still be wrong if the shape, washroom locations, exits, columns, walls, or access points do not support day care operation.

Washrooms, Plumbing, Electrical, and HVAC

Day care spaces often need deeper building-system review.

Review:

  • Existing washroom count
  • Washroom locations
  • Child-friendly washroom potential
  • Handwashing locations
  • Plumbing capacity
  • Kitchen or food prep needs
  • Electrical capacity
  • Lighting
  • Security systems
  • Access control
  • HVAC condition
  • Ventilation
  • Heating and cooling distribution
  • Staff and classroom comfort
  • Fire alarm and life-safety systems

A property may look finished but still require expensive upgrades once child care layout and licensing requirements are reviewed.

Lease Terms for Day Care Space

Day care build-outs can require meaningful investment, so lease terms matter.

Before signing, review:

  • Permitted day care use
  • Lease term
  • Renewal options
  • Assignment rights
  • Sublease rights
  • Landlord approval process
  • Outdoor play area rights
  • Parking rights
  • Signage rights
  • Tenant improvement allowance
  • Fixturing period
  • Rent-free period
  • HVAC responsibilities
  • Repair obligations
  • Restoration obligations
  • Demolition or relocation clauses
  • Personal guarantee exposure

A day care operator should not spend heavily on improvements without enough lease control to justify the investment.

Buying vs Leasing Day Care Space

Leasing may offer flexibility and lower upfront cost, especially for operators testing a market or expanding carefully.

Buying may offer more control, long-term stability, equity potential, and greater ability to invest in improvements.

Neither is automatically better.

The decision depends on:

  • Capital available
  • Financing
  • Location quality
  • Zoning
  • Licensing feasibility
  • Outdoor space
  • Build-out cost
  • Timeline
  • Long-term growth plan
  • Exit strategy
  • Risk tolerance

A lease can be risky if the term is too short or the landlord controls key approvals. A purchase can be risky if the property needs major upgrades or does not support the intended child care use.

Common Day Care Space Mistakes

Avoid these mistakes:

  • Choosing a space based only on rent
  • Assuming commercial zoning allows day care use
  • Signing before reviewing licensing feasibility
  • Ignoring outdoor play area requirements
  • Ignoring parent drop-off and pick-up flow
  • Underestimating parking needs
  • Ignoring washroom requirements
  • Ignoring accessibility
  • Ignoring fire and life-safety upgrades
  • Ignoring landlord approval rights
  • Assuming a former day care is automatically compliant
  • Choosing a space with poor classroom layout
  • Underestimating build-out cost
  • Accepting a short lease for an expensive improvement project
  • Ignoring future expansion
  • Failing to review assignment or exit options

Most day care property problems are predictable.

They become expensive when discovered after the lease is signed or the purchase is firm.

Day Care Property Resources

OntarioCRE can help review day care space based on zoning, licensing readiness, outdoor play area potential, parking, drop-off access, washrooms, layout, safety, accessibility, landlord restrictions, and build-out feasibility.

For related property types, review:

Need Help Finding Day Care Space in Ontario?

Day care space should be reviewed before committing to a lease, purchase, conversion, or build-out.

Zoning, licensing feasibility, outdoor play area potential, parking, drop-off and pick-up flow, washrooms, classroom layout, accessibility, fire and life-safety requirements, landlord approvals, build-out cost, and operating needs all need to work together.

OntarioCRE helps operators, landlords, investors, and property owners evaluate day care spaces, former child care centres, commercial conversions, church properties, retail units, office spaces, land opportunities, and off-market properties across Ontario.

Contact OntarioCRE to discuss day care space and child care property opportunities in Ontario.

Frequently Asked Questions About Day Care Space in Ontario

What should I look for in day care space?

Look for zoning that supports child care use, licensing feasibility, safe access, parking, drop-off and pick-up flow, outdoor play area potential, washrooms, classroom layout, accessibility, building condition, landlord approval rights, and realistic build-out cost.

Can a retail space be used for a day care?

Some retail spaces can work for day care use, but not all. The property must support zoning, licensing, parking, drop-off, outdoor play area potential, washrooms, safety, accessibility, landlord approval, and build-out requirements.

Can office space be converted into day care space?

Some office spaces may be converted, but many office properties have issues with outdoor play area, drop-off flow, washrooms, accessibility, fire exits, landlord restrictions, and layout. The space should be reviewed before signing a lease.

Is a former day care space automatically suitable?

No. A former day care space may help reduce build-out time, but zoning, licensing, layout, outdoor play area, washrooms, fire and safety systems, lease terms, and property condition still need to be reviewed.

Should I lease or buy day care space?

Leasing may reduce upfront cost and offer flexibility, while buying may provide control and long-term stability. The better choice depends on zoning, licensing feasibility, outdoor space, build-out cost, financing, timeline, and long-term business strategy.

Continue Your Day Care Property Search

Not seeing the right day care space yet?

Use the OntarioCRE Property Directory to browse commercial property opportunities across Ontario, including day care space, retail properties, office properties, church properties, commercial land, investment properties, and conversion-suitable commercial real estate.