Restaurant in Toronto, Canada
Adelaide St Italian with a loyal local following.

Tutti Matti on Adelaide St W is one of Toronto's easier Italian bookings, with a warm, compact room that works best for parties of two to four. It sits well below the booking pressure of Alo or Sushi Masaki Saito. If private dining for a larger group is your priority, compare it against Don Alfonso 1890 before committing.
If you have been to Tutti Matti before, the question on a return visit is whether anything has shifted. The address at 364 Adelaide St W puts it squarely in Toronto's Entertainment District, which means the surrounding block changes faster than the restaurant inside it. For a first-timer, the more useful question is simpler: is this the right Italian option for your group, and is it easy enough to book that you should just do it now?
The short answer is yes on both counts. Tutti Matti sits in a part of the Toronto dining market where Italian is well-represented but rarely done with regional focus. The room itself is the first thing you will notice: it is compact and warm, with a layout that favours smaller parties. Two or four people will feel well-placed here. If you are coming with a larger group, the spatial logic shifts and you will want to think carefully about whether the configuration works for your party size, or whether a venue with a dedicated private dining room would serve you better. For group dinners where a separated space matters, Don Alfonso 1890 or DaNico are worth comparing directly.
Booking here is easy relative to the broader Toronto restaurant market. You are not competing for seats the way you would at Alo or Sushi Masaki Saito, where reservations can require weeks or months of lead time. A week out is a reasonable buffer for most nights; weekend evenings during fall and winter, when Entertainment District foot traffic picks up, may require a few extra days. There is no known online booking obstacle here, so a direct approach to the restaurant should be sufficient.
For the first-timer, the practical advice is to arrive without a large party and without a tight timeline. The room rewards a slower pace. If your priority is a private or semi-private group experience with full Italian programming, compare it against Don Alfonso 1890 before committing. If you want a quieter Italian-leaning room outside the downtown core, The Pine in Creemore and Restaurant Pearl Morissette in Lincoln represent a different register entirely. For the full picture of where Tutti Matti fits in Toronto's dining options, see our full Toronto restaurants guide. You can also browse hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences across the city.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tutti Matti | Easy | ||
| Alo | Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Sushi Masaki Saito | Sushi, Japanese | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Aburi Hana | Kaiseki, Japanese | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Don Alfonso 1890 | Contemporary Italian, Italian | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Edulis | Canadian, Mediterranean Cuisine | $$$$ | Unknown |
A quick look at how Tutti Matti measures up.
Pricing varies at Tutti Matti; confirm via check the venue's official channels.
Tutti Matti is located in Toronto, at 364 Adelaide St W, Toronto, ON M5V 1R7, Canada.
You can reach Tutti Matti via check the venue's official channels.
Reservations are generally recommended for Tutti Matti; verify via check the venue's official channels.
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