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Depending on who you ask and where they live, Toronto's unofficial borders can look completely different, and that disagreement is once again playing out online after a map tried to draw a definitive line around what actually counts as the city. The map, which was posted on X by user Boris , defines a much smaller core of Toronto, minimizing it to a roughly 25 square kilometre area. As a result, only a tight cluster of neighbourhoods is included, such as Little Italy, Roncesvalles, Dovercourt Village, High Park, Kensington Market, and Harbour Village, to name a few. toronto is the greatest city on earth. but just to be clear, when i say toronto i mean the 25 km² area outlined on this map (sorry east enders) pic.twitter.com/GVy2NpDhzs — boris (@mysterymeat) April 9, 2026 The post has already received more than 280 replies and around 1,500 likes, with the comment section turning into a full, polarizing debate about what areas should and should not qualify as Toronto. Obviously, a major point of contention is what the map leaves out, as entire neighbourhoods that many Toronto residents consider integral parts of the city are excluded, including downtown Toronto, the St. Lawrence area, Etobicoke, Liberty Village, the east end, Scarborough, as well as anything north of Eglinton Avenue or west of High Park. Live on the danforth for a while and get back to me chief — The Ape of East York (@Osteopocalypse) April 10, 2026 Some respondents were quick to push back on the exclusions, with many coming to the defence of the east end, while others joked that anything east of Spadina might as well be considered Ajax. At the same time, a number of users supported the map's tight definition of Toronto, arguing that it reflects where the city actually feels walkable and accessible. riverdale to beaches *clears* on quality of life and outdoor spaces but not everyone is ready for that conversation my $0.02: lived at bellwoods for 5 years, lived in leslieville for 5 years pic.twitter.com/7nBMH1TcUT — Rob Palumbo (@RobPalumbo) April 10, 2026 "St Lawrence [is] literally the best neighbourhood in Toronto. This map is basically Etobicoke. It's like a minimum of an hour commute to go anywhere if you live Dundas West," one response reads . The way you completely glazed over Old Toronto, which is more Toronto than what you outlined is hilarious — Diego Cruz (@DiegoCruuzz) April 10, 2026 According to the official City of Toronto description, the city actually extends much farther than the viral map humorously suggests. Toronto's borders are generally formed by Lake Ontario to the south, Etobicoke Creek, Marie Curtis Park, and Highway 427 to the west, Steeles Avenue to the north, and the Rouge River and Scarborough Pickering Townline to the east. Still, these official boundaries don't stop people from debating them. What would you consider Toronto's true borders to be?
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