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Best Ghost Kitchens and Commercial Kitchens in Toronto, Ontario

Jim McCormickAuthor

As of 2022, Toronto is the 1st most populous city in Canada and among the highest in terms of restaurants per capita and density. With a vibrant and growing restaurant scene, and one of the largest populations in the country, Toronto has been one of the first cities nationwide to adopt the growing trend of ghost kitchens.

Counterpositioned against traditional dine-in restaurant operations, ghost kitchens are an emerging trend that allow online restaurant brands to reach consumers through delivery, but do not offer a sit-down restaurant experience. Ghost kitchens capitalized on the delivery-only restrictions during the COVID-19 lockdowns, and continue to be a burgeoning force and business model within the restaurant industry.

While many businesses ran successful delivery operations before the pandemic, the increased demand for restaurant-quality meals plated in take-out containers overwhelmed traditional business models. Many dishes just don’t travel well. Some brick-and-mortar had a difficult time pivoting, while delivery-only concepts had a chance to flourish.

New concepts are more likely to succeed on third-party delivery apps. Established brands sell ambiance and service in addition to culinary creations. But customers don’t want to have to pay for that ambiance if they’re not dining in.

Delivery orders are still outpacing dine-in traffic, growing 300 percent faster than their traditional counterpart. But, many restaurants pay a high price for convenience. The delivery fees and processing fees outweigh the savings in traditional restaurant models.

That’s where ghost kitchens and cloud kitchens come in. By eliminating front-of-house operations, ghost kitchens can cut labor costs by about 80%. And by using sales and inventory data to optimize the menu, some concepts lower food costs by about 50%.

Whether the food comes from a traditional kitchen or a dark kitchen, the customer experience of delivery is the same. And adopting a virtual business model offers lots of opportunities to keep the restaurant lean. 

Many shared kitchen spaces act as delivery-only hubs that allow restaurants to expand their range or launch a new concept without the investment of opening a location. Since customers interface with the business primarily online, restaurants can experiment with menu items and adjust ingredients without incurring the costs of reprinting physical menus or training FOH staff. 

This flexibility was really attractive to businesses that were learning to navigate pandemic restrictions. Ghost kitchens rose in popularity across the country. Many large-scale ghost kitchen brands were actually developed just before 2020, which allowed them to take advantage of a time when delivery and takeout were a necessity.

Years into a global pandemic, delivery needs are steady and customers have come to rely on apps like DoorDash, GrubHub, and Uber Eats. These companies purchased a lot of their localized competition and saw exponential growth in the last couple of years. The third-party delivery app industry is worth $35 billion and is estimated to become worth $356 billion in the next decade.

But delivery can’t save just any brand. When celebrities and big-wig chefs can open a branch of their ghost kitchen concept in every city, what room is left for the little guy? The competition in Toronto is especially heated. There are hundreds of ghost kitchen and virtual restaurant concepts on delivery apps and they can’t all possibly succeed.

That’s why many business owners are transitioning to commercial kitchens. Commercial kitchens allow smaller businesses to operate affordably by creating a shared space from which food trucks, virtual brands, meal-prep concepts, and catering outfits can operate.

Commercial kitchens help other companies by providing equipment and storage, and sometimes will assist with permits, licenses, and marketing. Staying flexible and adapting to consumer needs seems to be the expert move.

Best Ghost Kitchens and Commercial Kitchens in Toronto, Ontario

These dark kitchens and shared kitchens in Toronto are charting new paths forward:


Ghost Kitchen Name

Location

Tokyo Sando & Chicken
398 Church St, Toronto, ON M5B 1H5, Canada
Adobar200 Dundas St E, Toronto, ON M5A 1Z4, Canada
Guerilla Burger454 Bloor St W, Toronto, ON M5S 1X8, Canada
Divine Dumplings478 Dundas St W, Toronto, ON M5T 1G9, Canada
Anthony Sayers Custom Build5 Hanna Ave apt 418, Toronto, ON M6K 0B3, Canada
Kitchen 24100 Marmora St #200, North York, ON M9M 2X5, Canada
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