Toronto subway
| Toronto subway | |
|---|---|
A Toronto Rocket train at Museum station | |
A Flexity Freedom train at Eglinton station | |
| Overview | |
| Owner |
|
| Area served | Greater Toronto |
| Locale | |
| Transit type | Rapid transit |
| Number of lines | 5 (plus 1 under construction) |
| Number of stations | 109 (plus 26 under construction) |
| Daily ridership | 1,079,700 (weekdays, Q4 2025) |
| Annual ridership | 331,789,000 (2025) |
| Operation | |
| Began operation | March 30, 1954 |
| Operator(s) | Toronto Transit Commission |
| Number of vehicles |
|
| Train length |
|
| Headway |
|
| Technical | |
| System length | 100.1 km (62.2 mi) (33.2 km (20.6 mi) under construction) |
| Track gauge |
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| Electrification |
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The Toronto subway is a rapid transit system serving Toronto and the neighbouring city of Vaughan in Ontario, Canada. It is operated by the Toronto Transit Commission (TTC), an agency of the City of Toronto. The system is a rail network consisting of five lines: Line 1 Yonge–University, Line 2 Bloor–Danforth, Line 4 Sheppard, Line 5 Eglinton, and Line 6 Finch West.
In 1954, the TTC opened Canada's first underground rail line, then known as the "Yonge subway" and now part of Line 1, under Yonge Street between Union Station and Eglinton Avenue with 12 stations. As of 2026, the network encompasses 109 stations and 99.4 kilometres (61.8 mi) of route. In 2025, the system had a ridership of 331,789,000, or about 1,079,700 per weekday as of the fourth quarter of 2025, making it the busiest rapid transit system in Canada in terms of daily ridership. As of February 2026, there are 21 stations under construction as part of one new line (the Ontario Line) and two extensions to existing lines.