BMO Field
The 2007 soccer-specific stadium that grew into Toronto's outdoor dual-sport arena — and now holds 45,736 for the 2026 FIFA World Cup under the temporary name Toronto Stadium.
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Built on the same Exhibition Place footprint as the long-demolished Exhibition Stadium, BMO Field was expanded through major 2014–2016 renovations that added an upper deck to the east grandstand, a roof over the seating bowl, and a lengthened field for CFL play. The Argonauts moved in during 2016, and later that season BMO Field hosted the 104th Grey Cup. BMO Field hosted the 2016 and 2017 MLS Cup finals, both featuring Toronto FC. One of only two Canadian venues hosting 2026 FIFA World Cup matches.
What to look for
- The roofed grandstand — added during the 2014–2016 renovation, it replaced what was originally open-air seating
- The east upper deck, the most structurally visible addition from that same expansion cycle
- The elongated pitch, stretched beyond standard soccer dimensions to accommodate CFL football alongside MLS home games
At Exhibition Place, west of downtown Toronto; home to both Toronto FC (MLS) and the Toronto Argonauts (CFL) — check both clubs' schedules, as match days are the main reason to visit.
BMO Field is one of 19 sights worth the detour in Toronto, all bundled offline in Voyage GO — download the Toronto pack and it sits on your map with no signal, filling your travel passport the moment you walk past.
More to see in Toronto
- CN TowerFor 32 years, a railway company's broadcast antenna was the tallest free-standing structure on Earth.
- Scotiabank ArenaA 1941 postal sorting depot on Bay Street that became Canada's busiest arena — and the most photographed spot in the country on Instagram.
- Royal Ontario MuseumCanada's largest museum packs 18 million objects — Cambrian sea creatures, East Asian art, and Art Deco clothing and design objects — into 40 galleries on Bloor Street.
- Rogers CentreThe world's first fully retractable motorized roof opened here in 1989 — and 70 hotel rooms still peer straight down onto the field.
- First Canadian PlaceFor 50 years it was Canada's tallest building — until a fellow Toronto skyscraper finally beat it in June 2025.
- Art Gallery of OntarioFrank Gehry expanded the museum between 2004 and 2008; more than 120,000 works across six collecting areas fill the 45,000-square-metre result.