The Wilbur Taco Company
Mexican street food taco shop on Atlantic Avenue in Liberty Village. · No website yet.
New Mexican restaurants in Toronto: 20 have been licensed in the past year (1 in the last 30 days), tracked daily from the City of Toronto business-licence registry (chains excluded). The most recent is THE WILBUR TACO COMPANY, first seen 27 days ago.
Long underrepresented in Toronto, only recently catching up. Look for the distinctions: birria places, taquerias serving real al pastor on a trompo, vs the chain Tex-Mex that dominated the 2000s. The west end clusters the newer wave.
Start with tacos al pastor (spit-roasted pork with pineapple and cilantro) or birria (slow-braised beef or goat served with consommé for dipping) — both are well represented in Toronto's newer wave. Chilakillers on Parliament St specializes entirely in chilaquiles, the breakfast dish of fried tortilla chips simmered in salsa verde or roja and topped with egg, cream, and cheese. La Fondita in Etobicoke and Mr. Chaskeros on Eglinton W are strong picks for birria tacos specifically.
Birria is a slow-braised meat stew from Jalisco — traditionally goat, now commonly beef — cooked with dried chiles, tomatoes, and aromatics until falling apart. The viral version is birria tacos: tortillas dipped in the fat-skimmed consommé, griddled until crispy, stuffed with meat, and served with a cup of the broth for dunking. The technique produces a deeply savoury taco with a lacquered exterior. In Toronto, Mr. Chaskeros (1512 Eglinton Ave W) and La Fondita (2965 Islington Ave) both list birria as a focus dish.
The west end has the densest cluster of newer independents: Agave Azul (745 Queen St W), La Casa de la Abuela (St Clair Ave W), Casa Tabasco (Dundas St W), and Mr. Chaskeros (Eglinton Ave W) all sit within a few kilometres of each other. Downtown has Chilakillers (Parliament St) and Tacos de Princesa (King St W). East Toronto has Mexico Lindo on Queen St E and two spots on Danforth. Etobicoke and North York carry a handful of counter-service taquerias serving the city's larger Mexican immigrant population in those corridors.
More than most people expect. Bean and cheese tacos, chilaquiles with egg, quesadillas, esquites (street corn), tamales de rajas (poblano and cheese), and mole-sauced vegetables are all meat-free staples on traditional menus. Dulzura Mexican Desserts on Dupont is entirely plant-friendly territory — marquesitas, tres leches, and traditional sweets. The harder ask is vegan: lard is traditional in tortillas and refried beans, so it's worth asking at counter-service spots. Gluten is less of an issue since corn masa is the base of most Mexican street food.
Tex-Mex — hardshell tacos, ground beef, yellow cheddar, sour cream, chipotle-everything — was the dominant version in Toronto through the 2000s and is largely what chain restaurants still serve. Authentic Mexican cooking uses fresh or dried chiles (ancho, guajillo, pasilla) for depth rather than heat, corn masa tortillas made from nixtamalized corn rather than flour wraps, and regional techniques like slow-braising (birria, cochinita pibil) or achiote-marinated meats. The new wave in Toronto — Agave Azul, Oaxaca Coffee Shop on Vaughan Rd, El Sazon Yucateco in North York — leans into regional Mexican cooking, not the Tex-Mex playbook.
"First seen" reflects when each restaurant first surfaced in our combined evidence — City permit, public-health inspection, social media — usually within a few weeks of opening, but a permit can lead actual opening by months. How we verify ›
Mexican street food taco shop on Atlantic Avenue in Liberty Village. · No website yet.
Dulzura Mexican Desserts is a counter-service bakery on Dupont St in Downtown Toronto specializing entirely in Mexican sweets and pastries. · No website yet.
La Casa de la Abuela is a Mexican kitchen on St Clair Ave W in West Toronto, operated by Francisco Javier Hernandez Delgado. · No website yet.
Chilakillers is a Mexican Chilaquiles counter on Parliament St in Downtown Toronto, specializing in the breakfast-centric dish of fried tortilla chips layered with sauce,…
A Mexican taco spot on Yonge Street. · No website yet.
Mexico Lindo Restaurant serves Mexican cuisine on Queen St E in East Toronto, operating from a storefront in the neighbourhood's growing Latin American corridor. · No website yet.
Agave Azul is a Mexican kitchen on Queen St W in West Toronto, operating a focused menu of breakfast and lunch dishes rooted in central Mexican home cooking.
Yucatecan Mexican cuisine operates from a small North York storefront on Milvan Dr, focusing on the regional dishes and preparations of Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula rather than… · No website yet.
Tacos de Princesa is a single-cuisine Mexican kitchen on King St W in Downtown Toronto, built around the Taco as its complete focus.
This husband-and-wife kitchen on St Clair Ave W cooks regional Mexican, the kind that stays close to home recipes rather than Tex-Mex.
Habanero is a Mexican Taco counter on Browns Line in Etobicoke, specializing in Birria, the slow-braised beef preparation that distinguishes it from the standard Taco shop. · No website yet.
Taqueria El Tapatio is a Mexican taqueria on Danforth Ave in East Toronto, run by single operator Diego Enrique Sanchez Perez. · No website yet.
Casa Tabasco is a Mexican kitchen on Dundas St W in West Toronto, run by operator Jose Francisco Hernandez Izquierdo.
Mexican Birria specialist operating as a takeout counter on Eglinton Ave W in West Toronto, Mr. Chaskeros builds its menu around slow-braised Birria Tacos and filled Empanadas. · No website yet.
Mexican Tacos built around Pakistani Kebab and Tikka fillings operate at this Downtown counter on Spadina Ave, where two cuisines meet in a single handheld format. · No website yet.
Que Birra Taqueria is a Mexican Birria specialist on Yonge St in East Toronto, operating as a counter-service takeout kitchen focused on dum-cooked meat preparations. · No website yet.
Xuma Cocina Mexicana operates on Danforth Ave in East Toronto, serving Mexican cuisine to the neighbourhood's growing diaspora community. · No website yet.
Mexican cooking on St Clair Avenue West, despite the Polish-coded name. · No website yet.
Mexican cooking arrives on Wilson Ave in North York at MEX.CO Latin Store, a kitchen rooted in fresh corn masa prepared in-house daily. · No website yet.
Heart Broken Cantina Services is a Mexican kitchen on Lawrence Ave W in West Toronto, operating as a single-location independent under owner Raul. · No website yet.
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