Restaurant in Toronto, Canada
Giulietta
780Pearl PointsSerious Italian, no fanfare, worth it.

About Giulietta
Seven years in, Giulietta earns its Michelin Plate with classic Italian cooking that's precise without being precious. At $$$, it's one of Toronto's stronger value plays in the category — a well-chosen wine list, warm service, and a kitchen that has consistency behind it. Book a week out for weekends; weeknights are easier to land on shorter notice.
The Verdict
Giulietta is the right call for a relaxed weeknight dinner or a low-key date night on College Street — particularly if you want serious Italian cooking without the four-figure bill that comes with Toronto's top-end dining rooms. Rob Rossi and David Minicucci opened this trattoria in 2018, and seven years in it has earned a Michelin Plate (2024 and 2025), a White Star from Star Wine List, and back-to-back appearances on Opinionated About Dining's Casual North America list. At $$$, it sits in a comfortable middle tier: more considered than a neighbourhood red-sauce spot, far less demanding than a $$$$ tasting-menu commitment. If you've been once, you already know the room works. The question is what to prioritise on your next visit.
The Restaurant
Giulietta occupies a College Street storefront that reads intimate without feeling cramped. The layout rewards early arrivals: the front of the room has good energy without the noise compression that sets in closer to 9 PM. For two, request a table away from the service pass if you want a conversation to carry through the meal. The room doesn't have the formal hush of a white-tablecloth Italian restaurant, which is precisely the point — Rossi and Minicucci built this as a casual first project, and the spatial register reflects that. It's a room you can dress up or dress down for without either feeling wrong.
The kitchen's approach to Italian cooking is described in Michelin's own notes as giving classic cuisine a fresh spin that is both intriguing and correct , a useful framing. This is not a place rewriting what Italian food means; it's a place executing it with precision and a light editorial hand. The namesake pizza, La Giulietta, is singled out by Michelin as an example: lardo di Modena, smoked scamorza, and Sicilian pistachio. That combination reads as considered rather than gimmicky, and it's a useful signal for the kitchen's overall sensibility. The wine program earned a White Star from Star Wine List, which means the list is genuinely thoughtful , a step above the standard trattoria pour-and-forget approach.
If you're returning after a first visit, the pizza is the obvious anchor, but the cocktail and wine programs are worth more attention on a second visit. The OAD listing and Star Wine List recognition both point to a front-of-house operation that has consistency behind it, not just opening-year momentum. Seven years in, that consistency is the real story.
Late Evening at Giulietta
Giulietta runs until 10 PM Tuesday through Saturday, which makes it one of the more useful options on College Street if dinner is starting late. The kitchen doesn't cut the menu down toward the end of service the way some rooms do , arriving at 8:30 PM still gives you a full evening without the pressure of a timed reservation slot. For a late dinner that doesn't require planning weeks out, that 10 PM close is a practical advantage over the city's tighter tasting-menu rooms, most of which seat their last guests considerably earlier. If you're building an evening around a late start , a show at a nearby venue, or a drink somewhere first , Giulietta absorbs that timing without friction. Sunday is the one gap: the restaurant is closed, so plan around it.
Booking and Practical Details
Booking difficulty sits at moderate. Giulietta is not a two-month waitlist situation, but last-minute Friday or Saturday reservations are not reliable. For a weekend dinner, booking at least a week to ten days out is sensible. Weeknight availability is considerably more flexible, and Thursday in particular tends to have open slots closer to the date. The restaurant is open Monday through Saturday, 5–10 PM; closed Sunday.
The address is 972 College St, Toronto. College Street has good transit access via the College streetcar, and the neighbourhood has parking side streets if you're driving. There is no dress code on record, but the room's casual-Italian register means smart casual reads correctly , this is not a jeans-and-sneakers-or-black-tie situation, but neither is it a jacket-required room.
For solo diners, the counter or bar seating (where available) works well in a room of this scale. For groups of four or more, confirm table configuration when booking rather than assuming the room can accommodate a walk-in party at peak hours.
Quick reference: $$$, 972 College St, Mon–Sat 5–10 PM, closed Sunday, moderate booking difficulty.
Context in Toronto's Dining Scene
Toronto has a concentrated cluster of serious Italian cooking worth knowing about. For a broader view of where Giulietta sits, our full Toronto restaurants guide covers the range. If Italian is the priority and you want to compare formats, DaNico is the obvious peer in the Italian category. For the city's contemporary fine-dining tier, Alo is the benchmark , but that's a different commitment in price, formality, and booking lead time. If you're planning a broader Toronto trip, our Toronto hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide are useful starting points. For Canadian dining beyond Toronto, AnnaLena in Vancouver, Tanière³ in Quebec City, and Jérôme Ferrer's Europea in Montreal represent the country's other serious dining rooms worth tracking. Closer to Toronto, Restaurant Pearl Morissette in Lincoln and The Pine in Creemore are worth a day trip if the city's dining scene has you curious about what's happening in Ontario wine country.
FAQ
Is Giulietta good for solo dining?
- Yes, particularly on a weeknight. The room's casual format and moderate size make solo dining comfortable. If counter or bar seating is available, request it , you'll get a better vantage point and more natural service interaction than at a table-for-one in the middle of the room. At $$$, it's a reasonable solo spend without the commitment of a tasting menu format.
What should a first-timer know about Giulietta?
- Book ahead rather than walk in on a weekend. The La Giulietta pizza , called out by Michelin specifically , is the most useful anchor for a first visit. The wine list has a White Star from Star Wine List, so it's worth asking for a recommendation rather than defaulting to the obvious choices. Service is described as warm and professional, so the room won't feel stiff for a first visit.
What should I wear to Giulietta?
- Smart casual is the right register. No dress code is listed, and the room's trattoria format means you won't feel out of place in either a shirt and trousers or a good pair of jeans. It's not a jacket-required room, but it's also not the place to show up in workout gear. Think of it as the same standard you'd apply to a confident neighbourhood Italian in any major city.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Giulietta?
- There is no confirmed tasting menu in the available data for Giulietta. The restaurant operates as a trattoria with à la carte ordering. If a tasting format is what you're after, Alo or Don Alfonso 1890 are the more appropriate options in Toronto for that commitment.
Is Giulietta worth the price?
- At $$$, yes , with some context. Giulietta delivers Michelin Plate-level cooking and an award-recognised wine program at a price tier that doesn't require a special-occasion budget. Compared to Toronto's $$$$ Italian and contemporary rooms, it gives you most of the craft at noticeably less cost. The trade-off is format: this is a casual trattoria, not a destination tasting experience. If you're weighing value, Giulietta is the stronger choice for a mid-week dinner or a repeat visit; for a once-a-year splurge, Don Alfonso 1890 operates at a different register.
Is lunch or dinner better at Giulietta?
- Dinner is the only option , Giulietta operates exclusively from 5–10 PM, Monday through Saturday. There is no lunch service. If you're planning around a midday meal, you'll need to look elsewhere. For dinner, earlier in the week gives you more relaxed pacing and easier booking; Friday and Saturday have the most energy but also the most noise as the evening progresses.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Giulietta good for solo dining?
Yes — the counter and smaller tables at the front of the room work well for solo diners. The format is Italian trattoria, so there's no awkward multi-course commitment, and the service has been consistently noted as warm without being intrusive. At $$$, a solo dinner here is a reasonable spend for the quality the Michelin Plate and Opinionated About Dining recognition point to.
What should a first-timer know about Giulietta?
Giulietta is a College Street Italian from chefs Rob Rossi and David Minicucci, open Tuesday through Saturday from 5 PM and closed Sundays. It holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and has been ranked in Opinionated About Dining's Casual North America list since 2023, so the kitchen has credentials behind the casual room. Book ahead for Friday and Saturday — last-minute seats are not reliably available on weekends.
What should I wear to Giulietta?
Giulietta is a College Street trattoria, not a fine-dining room — the vibe skews relaxed neighbourhood restaurant. Clean, casual clothes are fine; there's no indication from its awards or format that formal dress is expected or appropriate.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Giulietta?
Giulietta's format is Italian trattoria rather than a dedicated tasting-menu destination — if a tasting menu is your priority, Alo or Edulis are the stronger Toronto calls. Giulietta's Michelin recognition and OAD ranking are built on its à la carte Italian cooking, so that's the format to book it for.
Is Giulietta worth the price?
At $$$, Giulietta sits in a reasonable range for a Michelin Plate restaurant with consistent OAD Casual North America recognition going back to 2023. For the College Street neighbourhood, it's among the more credentialled options, and it delivers Italian cooking that reviewers have called correct and intriguing rather than safe. If you're comparing spend, it costs less than a booking at Alo or Don Alfonso 1890 and delivers a meaningfully different, less formal experience.
Is lunch or dinner better at Giulietta?
Dinner only — Giulietta opens at 5 PM Tuesday through Saturday and is closed Sundays, so lunch is not an option. If you need a daytime Italian meal in Toronto, you'll need to look elsewhere.
Location
972 College St, Toronto, ON M6H 1A5, Canada
Toronto, Canada
Compare Giulietta
| Venue | Awards | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Giulietta | $$$ | |
| Alo | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ |
| Sushi Masaki Saito | Michelin 2 Star | $$$$ |
| Aburi Hana | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ |
| Don Alfonso 1890 | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ |
| Edulis | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ |
A quick look at how Giulietta measures up.
Also Consider
- Alo, Contemporary, $$$$
- Sushi Masaki Saito, Sushi, Japanese, $$$$
- Aburi Hana, Kaiseki, Japanese, $$$$
- Don Alfonso 1890, Contemporary Italian, Italian, $$$$
- Edulis, Canadian, Mediterranean Cuisine, $$$$
Giulietta sits at $$$ in a Toronto Italian dining field where most of its credentialed competition operates at $$$$. That price gap matters for how you should think about booking it. Don Alfonso 1890 is the natural comparison if you want Italian cooking with more formal service and a grander setting, but you'll pay significantly more and need to plan further ahead. Giulietta is the better choice if you want Michelin-recognised quality on a schedule that doesn't require a month's notice or a special-occasion budget.
Against Toronto's broader $$$$ dining tier, the gap in format is as important as the gap in price. Alo is the city's contemporary benchmark and a genuinely different kind of evening, tasting menu, formal pacing, considerably harder to book. Sushi Masaki Saito and Aburi Hana are serious commitments in the Japanese omakase and kaiseki formats respectively, worth the investment if that cuisine is the priority, but not substitutes for a casual Italian evening. Edulis competes in the Mediterranean-inflected Canadian space and is worth considering if you want something in a similar casual-but-serious register, though the cuisine profiles are distinct.
The practical read: if you want Italian specifically, Giulietta is the most accessible entry point in Toronto at a meaningful quality level. It books more easily than the $$$$ rooms, costs less, and doesn't demand a tasting-menu commitment. For a first Toronto Italian dinner or a regular return, it's the right tier. Reserve Don Alfonso 1890 for when you want the full formal Italian experience and have the lead time to plan it.
Hours
- Monday
- 5–10 pm
- Tuesday
- 5–10 pm
- Wednesday
- 5–10 pm
- Thursday
- 5–10 pm
- Friday
- 5–10 pm
- Saturday
- 5–10 pm
- Sunday
- Closed
Recognized By
Explore Toronto
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