General Contracting
in Toronto.

If your project crosses three or more trades, you need a general contractor — someone who sequences plumbing, electrical, framing, and finishing so you're not chasing four sub-contractors yourself. That's what we do. Serving homeowners across Toronto — including The Annex, Leslieville, Roncesvalles, High Park, Riverdale.

Typical investment in Toronto: $50K–$400K+ depending on scope

  • Licensed & Insured
  • Toronto-area since 2016
  • 200+ projects shipped
  • 5.0 ★ Google reviews

Permits in Toronto

We handle the municipal paperwork.

Toronto building permits are issued by the city's Toronto Building division. Most kitchen and bathroom renos require an electrical permit plus a building permit if walls move; we file both and schedule the ESA inspection.

What’s included

  • Full home renovations and additions
  • Basement finishing and underpinning
  • Permit acquisition + Ontario Building Code compliance
  • Trade scheduling — plumbing, electrical, HVAC, framing
  • Weekly progress updates + change-order discipline
  • Final walkthrough + one-year workmanship warranty
Quick Quote · 60 seconds

See your project's price range — before you call.

Three questions, real numbers from 200+ Toronto-area projects. We'll email the range and a brief on what drives it up or down.

Step 1 of 3

What kind of project?

Toronto FAQs

Things Toronto homeowners ask.

Do I need a permit for general contracting in Toronto?
Toronto building permits are issued by the city's Toronto Building division. Most kitchen and bathroom renos require an electrical permit plus a building permit if walls move; we file both and schedule the ESA inspection.
When do I need a general contractor vs. just a trade?
If your project needs more than one trade (plumber + electrician + framer, etc.) you need a GC. They handle scheduling, code compliance, and accountability — so a slow plumber doesn't block your tile guy.
How do change orders work?
Anything not in the original scope is documented in writing before we proceed — cost, schedule impact, your signature. No surprise invoices at the end.