Renting in
Bay Ridges.
Pickering's waterfront community — Frenchman's Bay harbour, the waterfront trail, and a family neighbourhood with easy GO Train access to downtown Toronto. If you're looking to rent in Bay Ridges, Pickering, this is where lakeside living meets suburban convenience — one of Durham Region's most desirable areas at a fraction of Toronto's price.
Bay Ridges is south Pickering's waterfront gem — a neighbourhood defined by Frenchman's Bay harbour, the Lake Ontario waterfront trail, and a genuine sense of community that's hard to find this close to Toronto. It's not flashy or trendy. It's established, comfortable, and quietly one of Durham Region's most desirable places to live.
The neighbourhood is anchored along Liverpool Road, which runs south to the water and is lined with local restaurants, cafes, and small shops. At its foot sits the Nautical Village and Millennium Square — the heart of the community. The area fans out into tree-lined residential streets with a mix of older bungalows, split-levels, and some newer condo and townhouse developments closer to the Pickering Town Centre corridor.
Pickering GO Station sits at the north edge of Bay Ridges near the 401, putting Union Station roughly 40 minutes away on the Lakeshore East line. You get waterfront living, a direct downtown commute, and rents that undercut Scarborough by a meaningful margin. For families, couples, and commuters who value lifestyle over nightlife, Bay Ridges delivers.
| Unit Type | Avg. Monthly Rent | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Studio / Bachelor | $1,350–$1,650 | Limited stock — mostly basement conversions |
| 1 Bedroom | $1,600–$2,100 | Pickering avg range, Q4 2025 data |
| 2 Bedroom | $2,050–$2,550 | Best value in Durham's waterfront corridor |
| 3 Bedroom | $2,500–$3,100 | Townhouses and detached rentals |
Source: TRREB Rental Market Report Q4 2025 (Pickering, leased apartments). Ranges reflect Bay Ridges-area variation by unit type, age, condition, and inclusions. Average rents across the GTA were down year-over-year in Q4 2025 — renters have real negotiating power right now.
What Your Dollar Gets You
Bay Ridges offers one of the best value propositions in the eastern GTA. Your dollar stretches further here than in Scarborough, and you get waterfront access and a direct GO Train line that most comparable neighbourhoods lack.
The rental stock is a mix of basement apartments in older detached homes, townhouse rentals, and some newer condo units near the Pickering Town Centre corridor to the north. Most landlords are individual owner-investors rather than institutional — which can mean more flexibility on lease terms but also less standardization.
Most rentals include one parking spot, which is essential. While Bay Ridges is more walkable than most Durham neighbourhoods thanks to Liverpool Road and the waterfront, a car is still the primary mode of getting around.
Transit & Roads
Bay Ridges benefits from Pickering GO Station on the Lakeshore East line — one of GO Transit's most frequent routes. Trains run into Union Station in approximately 40 minutes, with regular service throughout the day and frequent rush-hour departures. The station sits near Highway 401 at the north edge of the neighbourhood.
Durham Region Transit (DRT) serves the area with local bus routes connecting Bay Ridges to Pickering Town Centre, Ajax, and Whitby. Route connectivity has improved in recent years, though service frequency still lags behind TTC standards. The Liverpool Road corridor is reasonably walkable for a suburban neighbourhood.
By car, Highway 401 is immediately accessible, connecting west to Scarborough and Toronto (35–45 minutes to downtown in normal traffic) and east to Whitby, Oshawa, and beyond. The neighbourhood's southern location means you're closer to the 401 than most of Pickering — a genuine daily commuting advantage.
What This Means for Renters
Bay Ridges has a solidly middle-to-upper-middle income profile — median household income sits around $98,000, above both the national and Durham Region medians. This is a neighbourhood of working professionals, established families, and a growing contingent of retirees drawn to the waterfront lifestyle.
For landlords, that income profile means they expect well-documented rental applications. Come prepared with employment verification, references, and credit history. The waterfront location and GO Train access make Bay Ridges competitive — good units don't sit on the market for long, especially 2-bedroom and 3-bedroom family-sized rentals in the $2,300–$3,000 range.
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Bay Ridges is one of Durham Region's most desirable rental areas. You get genuine waterfront living with Frenchman's Bay harbour, walkable access to Liverpool Road restaurants and the Nautical Village, and a direct GO Train connection to Union Station in about 40 minutes. The trade-off is that rental inventory is limited — this is predominantly an owner-occupied family neighbourhood, so quality units move quickly. If you value lifestyle, outdoor access, and a strong community feel over urban nightlife, Bay Ridges is hard to beat at its price point.
Bay Ridges is defined by Frenchman's Bay — a sheltered harbour on Lake Ontario with a marina, fishing pier, and kayak launch access. The Waterfront Trail runs through the neighbourhood connecting Petticoat Creek Conservation Area to the east with Ajax to the west. Millennium Square at the foot of Liverpool Road hosts community events and farmers markets with direct lake views. It's one of the few GTA neighbourhoods where you can genuinely walk to the water from your home and enjoy it year-round.
Pickering GO Station is located at the north end of Bay Ridges near Highway 401. The train runs on the Lakeshore East line into Union Station in approximately 40 minutes. This is one of GO's most frequent lines with regular all-day service. Door-to-door commute is realistically 50–60 minutes depending on your exact location within Bay Ridges and your destination downtown. By car via the 401, downtown Toronto is approximately 35–45 minutes in normal traffic — significantly longer during peak hours.
Bay Ridges offers a quieter, more family-oriented waterfront lifestyle compared to most Scarborough neighbourhoods. Rents are comparable or slightly lower than Scarborough's better areas like Guildwood or Port Union, but you get a stronger community feel, genuine harbour access, and a direct GO Train line. The trade-off is fewer transit options (DRT vs TTC), fewer dining and entertainment choices, and a smaller rental inventory overall. Scarborough wins on convenience, diversity of options, and TTC access; Bay Ridges wins on lifestyle, waterfront living, and space per dollar.
Bay Ridges is excellent for families. The neighbourhood has strong public and Catholic schools including Pine Ridge Secondary School and Dunbarton High School. Bay Ridges Kinsmen Park, Petticoat Creek Conservation Area, and the Waterfront Trail provide abundant outdoor space for kids and adults alike. The community is established, safe, and family-oriented — about 45% of households are families with children. The waterfront is a genuine daily asset, not just a weekend destination, and the overall pace of life here is noticeably calmer than anything comparable in Toronto proper.
Bay Ridges rental stock is a mix of basement apartments in older detached homes, townhouse rentals, and some newer condo units near the Pickering Town Centre corridor. About 35% of residents rent. Most rentals include parking, which is essential given the suburban layout. Purpose-built rental apartments are limited in Bay Ridges specifically, so most inventory comes from individual landlords renting out investment properties or secondary suites. The 2025 GTA rental market softening has reached Pickering too — landlords are more willing to negotiate on price and terms than they were in 2022–2023.