Toronto PATH Map: Interactive Underground Walkway Wayfinder
The world's largest underground shopping complex. 30 km of tunnels, 75+ buildings, and 1,200 shops and services, fully mapped and searchable.

Navigate Toronto's PATH from any point in the network, including tunnels, building connections, subway entrances, food courts, shops, and services. Use the interactive map to search for a specific retailer or restaurant, get step-by-step directions between buildings, or find the nearest subway station from wherever you are underground. The map is kept current by the venues themselves, so it's always more accurate than a screenshot or a printed directory. Also available at pathmap.to.
About Toronto's PATH Network
Toronto's PATH is the world's largest underground pedestrian walkway and shopping complex, spanning over 30 kilometres beneath the streets of downtown Toronto. It connects more than 75 office towers, hotels, and public buildings, and is used by over 200,000 commuters and visitors every day.
With 3.7 million square feet of retail space, PATH contains over 1,200 restaurants, shops, and services, generating roughly $1.7 billion in sales annually. Six subway stations, three major department stores, nine hotels, and Toronto's busiest transit hub, Union Station, are all accessible through the PATH.
The network also connects to the Scotiabank Arena, the CF Toronto Eaton Centre, the Hockey Hall of Fame, Roy Thomson Hall, and City Hall.
Each letter in PATH represents a cardinal direction and a corresponding colour:
- P is red for south
- A is orange for west
- T is blue for north
- H is yellow for east
Despite this system, the PATH has been notorious for disorienting even frequent users. With more than 125 street-level access points and 60 decision points where a pedestrian must choose between left, right, or straight, the network is as easy to get lost in as it is to use once you know it.
Why PATH needs an interactive map
A static PDF of the PATH has been obsolete since the day it was printed. A printed map distributed in 2022 doesn't show the coffee shop that opened in 2024, the entrance that was closed for construction, or the fastest route from a specific building to Union Station on a Tuesday morning.
The PATH map solves all of that. It's updated by the venues themselves in real time, searchable by name or category, and accessible on any device.
For the 200,000+ people moving through the network every day, the difference between a live interactive map and a screenshot is the difference between getting where you're going and getting lost three floors underground.
For property owners and city districts with complex multi-building pedestrian networks, PATH is the clearest proof point that this problem is solvable at scale.
Details
- Mappedin
- Toronto, ON
- PATH Map Website
