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    Restaurant in Toronto, Canada

    Burger’s Priest

    100Pearl Points

    Serious burger, no reservation, no fuss.

    Burger’s Priest, Restaurant in Toronto

    About Burger’s Priest

    Burger's Priest is Toronto's most credentialed casual burger stop — ranked on Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats in North America list for 2024 and carrying. Walk-ins only, no dress code, priced well under $20 CAD. Go for lunch on a weekday; it is the practical, no-ceremony anchor for any food-focused Toronto itinerary.

    The Verdict

    If you want a serious burger in Toronto without a reservation, a dress code, or a bill that makes you wince, Burger's Priest is the answer. This is the spot for a food-focused lunch where the quality-to-cost ratio does most of the talking. Ranked #373 on Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats in North America list for 2024 and Recommended in 2023, it has the kind of outside validation that separates a genuinely good fast-casual burger from neighbourhood hype. Book it for: solo lunches, casual weekday meals, anyone who wants credible burger credentials without the fine-dining overhead.

    What to Expect

    The King Street East location puts Burger's Priest in a part of Toronto that mixes office workers, condo residents, weekend wanderers. Walk in during the lunch rush and the scene is immediate: a compact counter setup, trays moving fast, burgers arriving in paper wrapping that does nothing to hide the structural ambition of what's inside. Visually, this is not a white-tablecloth room — it is a purposeful, stripped-back space where the plate (or the tray) is the main event, not the décor.

    The OAD Cheap Eats recognition is the clearest signal of what you are getting here: a kitchen that takes the burger format seriously, executing it at a price point that makes it accessible on a Tuesday at noon or a Saturday afternoon. For food-focused visitors to Toronto who want to eat well across a range of price points, Burger's Priest fills the casual end of the itinerary without compromise.

    Lunch vs. Dinner at Burger's Priest

    This is fundamentally a daytime venue. Lunch is where Burger's Priest makes the strongest case for itself: the energy is higher, the throughput is at its finest, there is something specifically satisfying about a well-made burger as a midday meal. Coming in at lunch also means you are likely eating alongside a mix of local workers and in-the-know visitors, which gives the room a grounded, everyday-Toronto feel that is harder to replicate at a dinner sitting.

    For dinner, the calculus shifts slightly. The burger is the same, but the surrounding context changes. If you are in Toronto for a few nights and have access to the city's stronger dinner options — Alo for contemporary tasting menus, DaNico for Italian, or Don Alfonso 1890 for a grander Italian occasion, those are harder to replicate elsewhere. A Burger's Priest dinner is a perfectly reasonable choice, but it is a lunch venue at heart, the experience is marginally better when you catch it in daylight hours.

    How It Fits in Toronto's Eating Map

    Toronto has a wide fast-casual and burger scene, but few burger spots carry OAD Cheap Eats recognition at a continental scale. For a city with as much dining depth as Toronto, see our full Toronto restaurants guide for the broader picture, Burger's Priest occupies a specific and useful niche: it is the credible, no-ceremony burger option that earns its place on a serious food itinerary.

    If you are building a Toronto trip around food, this slots in as the casual counterweight to heavier bookings. Pair it with a fine-dining dinner at Aburi Hana for kaiseki or Sushi Masaki Saito for high-end omakase, Burger's Priest earns its place in the rotation by contrast and by quality. For burger lovers with a global reference point, it is worth comparing against Aldebaran and Atami in Tokyo, two venues that show how seriously the format is taken internationally.

    Beyond Toronto, if you are travelling across Canada and want to benchmark serious casual eating, look at Kissa Tanto in Vancouver or Jérôme Ferrer - Europea in Montreal for how other cities anchor their casual-to-fine-dining range.

    Ratings and Recognition

    • OAD Cheap Eats North America: Ranked #373 (2024)
    • OAD Cheap Eats North America: Recommended (2023)

    Practical Details

    Booking: Walk-ins accepted, no reservation required. Dress: Casual, no expectations. Budget: Cheap eats pricing; expect to spend well under $20 CAD per person. Location: 351 King St E, Suite 70, Toronto. Leading time to go: Lunch on a weekday for the full experience. Booking difficulty: Easy, just show up.

    Pearl Picks: More Toronto and Beyond

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Burger's Priest good for a special occasion?

    Not the right fit. Burger's Priest is OAD-recognised cheap eats — walk-in, casual, no dress code, priced well under $20 CAD. For a birthday dinner or anniversary meal, you want Alo or Edulis instead. Burger's Priest is the right call when the occasion is a great burger, not a moment.

    Can Burger's Priest accommodate groups?

    Small groups work fine. The King Street East location at 351 King St E handles the throughput of a fast-casual format, so parties of four to six should be comfortable during off-peak hours. For larger groups wanting a sit-down experience with reserved space, this is not the format — look elsewhere in Toronto.

    What should a first-timer know about Burger's Priest?

    No reservations, no dress expectations, pricing that sits firmly in the cheap eats bracket — under $20 CAD per head is the norm. The OAD Cheap Eats in North America recognition (ranked #373 in 2024) tells you this is not a random fast-food stop; it has earned its place in a competitive category. Come hungry, come casual, expect to order at the counter.

    Is Burger's Priest good for solo dining?

    Yes, it is one of the easier solo calls in Toronto. No reservation required, counter-style ordering, cheap eats pricing mean there is no friction — you show up, you eat, you leave satisfied. For solo diners who want table service and atmosphere, the format is different, but for a quick, quality burger alone, this works well.

    Location

    351 King St E Suite 70, Toronto, ON M5A 0N1, Canada

    Toronto, Canada

    Compare Burger’s Priest

    Worth the Price? Burger’s Priest vs. Peers

    What to weigh when choosing between Burger’s Priest and alternatives.

    Also Consider

    Comparing Burger's Priest against Toronto's fine-dining tier, Alo, Sushi Masaki Saito, Enigma Yorkville, Shoushin, and Edulis, is almost a category error. Those venues operate at $$$$ price points, require advance reservations, deliver multi-course or omakase experiences where the total bill per head is likely ten times what you will spend at Burger's Priest. The comparison is useful precisely because it clarifies when to use each: Burger's Priest is your lunch or casual slot, the $$$$ venues above compete for your dinner booking.

    Within the casual end of the Toronto eating spectrum, Burger's Priest earns its position through outside recognition rather than marketing. An OAD Cheap Eats ranking at a continental level is a more reliable signal than local buzz alone. If your priority is value, walk-in ease, a focused format, Burger's Priest is the practical call over most alternatives in the same price bracket. If your priority is a full dining experience with wine, service, a room worth spending two hours in, book Alo or Edulis instead, both require planning well in advance.

    For a food-focused Toronto trip, the most useful framing is this: Burger's Priest fills the casual daytime slot so your dinner budget can go further at the venues where ambience, service, a longer meal actually matter. It is not competing with Shoushin for your Friday night, it is making your Saturday lunch decision easy.

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