Toronto is in the middle of a polar-vortex-driven cold snap, with Environment Canada forecasting bitter temperatures, strong winds, and wind chills cold enough to raise frostbite risk—especially overnight and early morning.
Current alert status
As of late Friday night (Jan 23), Environment Canada has:
- Yellow Watch — Winter Storm (issued 10:48 p.m. EST)
- Yellow Warning — Cold (issued 10:47 p.m. EST)
The cold warning highlights wind chills near -30 to -33 continuing into Saturday morning, with frostbite risk on exposed skin.
Polar vortex Toronto: wind chills near -31, snow/squall risk
What’s happening (and why it feels brutal)
This setup is basically an Arctic air outbreak tied to the polar vortex pattern—cold air pushing farther south than usual. In Toronto, that usually means the “feels like” number matters more than the actual temperature once wind picks up.
Forecast snapshot for Toronto (Environment Canada)
Forecast issued 7:08 p.m. EST Friday, Jan 23
| Period | Air temperature | Wind chill / notes |
|---|---|---|
| Tonight | Low -22°C | Wind chill -31 overnight; risk of frostbite |
| Sat (Jan 24) daytime | High -12°C | Wind chill -30 in the morning; risk of frostbite |
| Sat night | Low -14°C | Risk of snow squalls before morning; local 2–4 cm possible |
| Sun (Jan 25) daytime | High -7°C | Snow or snow squalls; local blowing snow; windy |
| Sun night | Low -13°C | Snow or snow squalls; local blowing snow; windy |
What the numbers mean in Toronto
Two different “cold triggers” get mixed up:
- City of Toronto Extreme Cold Weather Alert (Warming Centres / outreach response): issued when Environment Canada forecasts -15°C or colder or wind chill -20 or colder within the City, and it’s typically reviewed/updated at 7:00 a.m. daily (with discretion for added risk factors).
- “Extreme Cold” alerts used more broadly in southern Ontario: often referenced at -31°C (temperature or wind chill) for at least two hours.
Bottom line: even without a “-30” type threshold, a forecast wind chill near -28 plus frostbite language is a real cue to shorten time outside and cover exposed skin.
What will hit people most
Commutes: waiting outdoors is the problem—wind chill drops comfort fast, especially at bus stops and platforms.
Driving: cold starts, reduced battery power, and blowing snow can turn a normal trip into a slow one.
Homes: older houses and exterior-wall plumbing are more vulnerable during multi-night cold runs.
City services: Toronto can activate Warming Centres and expand outreach when Extreme Cold Weather Alerts are called.
How to get through the Polar vortex Toronto
Commuting
- Dress for wind, not the temperature number (a wind-blocking outer layer matters most).
- Cover skin: mittens + a face covering/neck gaiter beats “more layers” that still leak wind.
- Take short warm-up breaks indoors when you can.
Driving
- Keep the tank at least half full; pack gloves, a small blanket, and a phone cable.
- If the car struggles to start, avoid repeated cranking—pause and try again.
At home (especially older units)
- Keep warm air circulating near plumbing (open under-sink doors on exterior-wall pipes).
- If you’ve had freeze-ups before, a thin trickle on the most vulnerable tap during the coldest overnight hours can help.