Certified Class A buildings in Toronto now command a measurable rent premium and are the default expectation for institutional tenants signing 10-year leases.

  • Trophy Toronto product (e.g., Financial Core) is overwhelmingly LEED Gold/Platinum or local-equivalent certified.
  • Green premium across major markets runs 5–15% on rent and shows in valuation cap rates.
  • Mandatory disclosure regimes are tightening globally; uncertified stock is increasingly hard to lease to investment-grade tenants.
  • Most Toronto ESG underwriting now pulls operational energy data, not just certification badges.

Toronto ESG-certified office stock

Certified Class A buildings in Toronto now command a measurable rent premium and are the default expectation for institutional tenants signing 10-year leases.

TL;DR

  • Trophy Toronto product (e.g., Financial Core) is overwhelmingly leed">LEED Gold/Platinum or local-equivalent certified.
  • Green premium across major markets runs 5–15% on rent and shows in valuation cap rates.
  • Mandatory disclosure regimes are tightening globally; uncertified stock is increasingly hard to lease to investment-grade tenants.
  • Most Toronto ESG underwriting now pulls operational energy data, not just certification badges.

What's certified in this market

Toronto's trophy inventory is overwhelmingly certified — LEED Gold/Platinum in markets that follow USGBC, BREEAM Excellent/Outstanding in UK and parts of EMEA, CASBEE in Japan, Green Mark in Singapore. Notable certified Toronto buildings include CIBC SQUARE Phase 1 (LEED Platinum / WELL Gold), 16 York Street (LEED Platinum), 100 Adelaide Street West.

The rent premium is real

Across major Tier 1 markets, certified Class A buildings command a 5–15% rent premium versus equivalent uncertified stock. The premium is largest at the top of the curve (Platinum vs. uncertified Class A) and narrows in mid-tier comparisons.

What occupiers should ask for

In a Class A LOI, ask for: (1) current certification status and pathway to renewal, (2) operational energy intensity (kWh/sqm/yr) over the trailing 24 months, (3) green-lease provisions covering data sharing, and (4) tenant fit-out">fit-out alignment with the building's certification. Net leases — tenant pays a base rent plus a proportional share of operating expenses, realty taxes, and utilities (TMI). Rent-free of 12-24 months on a 10-year term is current market. Bank guarantees common for non-investment-grade covenants.

Key facts

cityToronto
countryCanada
regionAmericas
classARentLocal78 CAD/sqft/yr
classARentUsd$57/sqft/yr
vacancy17.6%
typicalLeaseYears10
typicalRentFreeMonths18
submarkets6
primeYieldPct5.5%
trophySubmarketFinancial Core

Frequently asked questions

Do Toronto landlords pay for the ESG premium?
Tenants pay it through rent. The economic case is energy-cost savings + brand value + retention; the strategic case is futureproofing against tightening disclosure regimes.
Which certification matters most in Toronto?
LEED is the global default occupiers recognise; the local equivalent (BREEAM in the UK, CASBEE in Japan, Green Mark in Singapore) often carries equal or greater regulatory weight.

Editorial provenance

Reviewed by Miriam Hollander — Lead market analyst. Last updated 2026-04-15. See our methodology and editorial standards.

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Related topics

  • ESG / LEED for Tenants — How tenants evaluate, negotiate, and report on ESG performance in a Class A office lease.