Ward 11 · University–Rosedale
Voting Info
Everything you need to cast your ballot in Toronto’s 2026 municipal election, all in one place.
Election Day
Monday, October 26, 2026
Polls are open 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Advance Voting
October 6 to 11, 2026
Tuesday through Sunday, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Vote early at any advance poll.
Voter Registration
Opens September 1
Register by September 20 to get a voter information card in the mail. The list closes October 11 at 7 p.m.

University–Rosedale is Ward 11.
It’s one of Toronto’s twenty-five wards, and it elects one councillor to City Hall. Karina is running for that seat.
It runs from Ossington Avenue in the west across to Bayview Avenue and the Don Valley in the east. Along the bottom it follows Dundas Street West, then turns north up Bay Street and east along Bloor Street East. Up top it traces Dupont Street and the CP rail line, and reaches as far as St Clair Avenue East through Rosedale and Moore Park.
So these are the neighbourhoods on the ballot:
- The Annex
- Yorkville
- Seaton Village
- Palmerston
- Harbord Village
- Kensington Market
- The University of Toronto
- The Discovery District
- Queen's Park
- Rosedale
- Moore Park
There’s a federal riding with the same name, and it covers a slightly different area. The map here is the city ward — that’s the one Karina is on.
Good to know.
Who can vote?+
You can vote in this election if you’re a Canadian citizen, at least 18 years old on election day, and you live in Toronto — or you (or your spouse) own or rent property in the city — and you’re not otherwise prohibited from voting by law. You get one vote, even if you own more than one property.
Which ward am I in?+
University–Rosedale is Ward 11. It runs from Ossington Avenue in the west across to Bayview Avenue and the Don Valley in the east, and from Dundas Street West in the south up through the Annex and Yorkville to Rosedale and Moore Park. If your address is anywhere in there, Karina is on your ballot. If you’re close to the edge, check with the City — their lookup will confirm your ward from your address in a few seconds.
Isn’t University–Rosedale a federal riding?+
There’s a federal riding with the same name, but it covers a slightly different area than the city ward. If you’re near the edge, check your ward with the City to be sure.
What ID do I need?+
One piece of ID showing your name and your qualifying Toronto address. A driver’s licence works, and so do plenty of everyday documents — a utility bill, a bank statement, a lease. You don’t need photo ID.
Am I on the voters’ list?+
The City’s MyVote tool opens on September 1, 2026, and that’s where you’ll check, add, or update your registration. Until then, you can confirm your information with Elections Ontario. You can also register in person when you go to vote, as long as you bring the right ID.
What if I can’t make it on election day?+
Vote early. Advance polls run October 6 to 11, and you can use any of them. Toronto also offers mail-in voting for electors who can’t get to a poll, and every voting place has accessible equipment. If you need a mail-in ballot, apply well ahead — it has to reach you and get back in time.
Official resources
We’ll keep this page current, but for registration, poll locations, and accessible voting, go straight to the source:
The City’s MyVote tool — where you’ll find your poll and confirm your ward — opens September 1, 2026.