Toronto runs 6 pro teams across NHL, NBA, MLB, CFL, MLS, and WNBA — the Maple Leafs (NHL), the Raptors (NBA), the Blue Jays (MLB), and the Argonauts (CFL), and more. This page filters every live listing to July 3 – July 5 only — sorted by date so the earliest weekend start sits on top — so a Friday-night game, a Saturday matinee and a Sunday afternoon all surface in one feed.
What's worth seeing in Toronto this weekend
Baseball is the value play in Toronto: an 81-date home schedule means the Blue Jays at Rogers Centre carry the deepest, softest inventory, and weeknight upper-deck seats are routinely the cheapest tickets in town inside a 49,282-seat ballpark.
Hockey seats swing hard by opponent — the Maple Leafs at Scotiabank Arena price midweek non-rivalry games far below weekend and Original-Six matchups, so a flexible date is the surest path under $50.
Basketball pricing tracks the marquee visitors: the Raptors at Scotiabank Arena discount weeknight games against lottery teams, where upper-bowl corners are the value seats in South Core / Harbourfront (downtown Toronto).
Soccer is the family-budget option: the Toronto FC at BMO Field run supporter-section and general-admission pricing well under the stick-and-ball leagues, and midweek league dates are cheapest.
Canadian football offers strong value — the Argonauts at BMO Field price general-admission and end-zone seats low outside the rivalry and playoff dates.
Planning Your Toronto Weekend
Toronto has 1 game on the schedule this weekend (July 3 – July 5). Maple Leafs, Raptors, Blue Jays stack their highest-demand matchups Friday through Sunday, so marquee games (rivalries, divisional clashes, premium opponents) often sell out the primary market fast. Verified resale floors regularly drop in the final 24–72 hours before first pitch or kickoff as sellers move inventory before it loses value. If you're locking in plans this week, check the grid below tonight, pick 2–3 candidate games, and watch prices into Friday morning. Weeknight pivots also work — a Tuesday or Wednesday home game routinely prices 30–50% under the Saturday date.
Toronto Weekend Venues
Scotiabank Arena anchors the Toronto weekend calendar, hosting most Maple Leafs home games. The grid above pulls events across every covered Toronto venue, so a Friday-night game, a Saturday matchup, and a Sunday afternoon all surface in one feed.
Toronto sports market at a glance
Toronto is one of the country's deepest sports markets, with 6 pro teams spanning NHL, NBA, MLB, CFL, MLS, and WNBA. That translates to roughly 209 combined home dates across the calendar year, which means competition for entertainment dollars keeps the secondary market active and gives flexible buyers more chances to find value.
Venue capacity shapes the price floor here. Rogers Centre seats 49,282 for Blue Jays games, which creates more available inventory per event and generally softer resale pricing. In contrast, Scotiabank Arena holds 19,800, so Maple Leafs tickets carry tighter supply and higher floors on popular dates.
Game-day guide: Toronto venues
Scotiabank Arena — Maple Leafs (NHL)
Scotiabank Arena (19,800 seats) is a large indoor arena in South Core / Harbourfront (downtown Toronto) that hosts Maple Leafs (NHL) home games. Upper-level center seats are the value play for sightlines, with lower-bowl corners and baselines offering closer views at mid-range prices. Courtside, rinkside, and club sections sit at the top of the price scale. No large dedicated lot; fans use the attached Union Station GO/Green P garages and numerous South Core commercial garages along Bay and York Streets, with pre-booking advised on event nights. Connected to Union Station via the PATH, served by TTC subway Line 1, GO Transit, and the UP Express, making it the most transit-accessible arena in the country.
Rogers Centre — Blue Jays (MLB)
Rogers Centre (49,282 seats) is a mid-size stadium in South Core / Harbourfront (downtown Toronto) that hosts Blue Jays (MLB) home games. In a stadium this size, upper-deck sideline sections offer the best value views, while lower-bowl seats between the 20-yard lines or behind home plate carry the highest prices. End-zone and outfield seats split the difference. A small on-site garage plus many South Core and Entertainment District lots serve the ballpark; most fans pre-book a nearby Green P or commercial garage given limited stadium parking. A two-minute walk from Union Station via the SkyWalk, served by TTC subway Line 1, GO Transit, and the UP Express.
BMO Field — Argonauts (CFL)
BMO Field (30,000 seats) is a mid-size stadium in Exhibition Place (Liberty Village area) that hosts Argonauts (CFL) home games. In a stadium this size, upper-deck sideline sections offer the best value views, while lower-bowl seats between the 20-yard lines or behind home plate carry the highest prices. End-zone and outfield seats split the difference. Exhibition Place surface lots and the on-grounds parking structures serve the stadium; rates rise during major events and the CNE. The TTC 509 Harbourfront and 511 Bathurst streetcars stop at Exhibition Loop, with GO Transit Lakeshore West trains stopping at Exhibition station a short walk away.
Coca-Cola Coliseum — Toronto Tempo (WNBA)
Coca-Cola Coliseum (8,140 seats) is a mid-size arena in Exhibition Place that hosts Toronto Tempo (WNBA) home games. Upper-level center seats are the value play for sightlines, with lower-bowl corners and baselines offering closer views at mid-range prices. Courtside, rinkside, and club sections sit at the top of the price scale. Exhibition Place lots surround the coliseum, with paid event parking in the Beanfield and BMO Field lots a short walk away. The TTC 509 Harbourfront and 511 Bathurst streetcars stop at Exhibition Loop, and GO Transit serves Exhibition station nearby.

