NowServingTO

Toronto's newest registered Pakistani restaurants

Pakistani

New Pakistani restaurants in Toronto: 8 have been licensed in the past year, tracked daily from the City of Toronto business-licence registry (chains excluded). The most recent is ROYAL KARAHI, first seen 3 months ago.

Often shares a kitchen with Indian, but there's a distinct character - more grilled meats (boti, seekh), Mughlai-leaning curries, and Pakistani-Punjabi rather than Punjabi-Indian inflection. Brampton is the regional anchor; Scarborough has the densest Toronto-proper presence.

How is Pakistani food different from Indian food?

The overlap is real — both cuisines share tandoor bread, rice dishes, and a spice vocabulary rooted in Mughal cooking — but the emphasis diverges sharply. Pakistani restaurants lean harder on grilled meat (seekh kebab, boti, chapli kebab) and slow-braises like nihari, while the South Indian and Gujarati vegetarian traditions that shaped much of Canadian "Indian" food barely register. The karahi — named for the iron wok it's cooked in — is the signature Pakistani prep: meat, tomatoes, ginger, garlic, and black pepper, finished tableside in the cooking vessel.

In Toronto, Royal Karahi on Queen St E and Shaheen Shinwari Karahi in Scarborough make the distinction concrete — both are named for the dish, not the region, and their menus are built around it. King Place BBQ & Curry on Parliament St signals the charcoal-grill side of the tradition alongside the curry menu.

What should I order at a Pakistani restaurant?

Start with the karahi if it's a specialty of the house — chicken or mutton, cooked to order in the iron wok, oily from rendered fat, served with naan or roti. If the kitchen lists nihari, order it: it's a slow-cooked shank and bone-marrow stew made overnight, thick, dark, and spiced with kewra water and mace, traditionally eaten at breakfast but served through the day at most Toronto spots. Lahori Xpress on Albion Rd in Etobicoke is known for nihari and halwa puri, the latter being a fried bread with chickpea curry that is the Pakistani breakfast benchmark.

Seekh kebab — hand-minced spiced lamb on a flat skewer, charcoal-grilled — is the other reliable order at kitchens with a live grill. King Place BBQ & Curry on Parliament St runs a menu built around the grill side of the tradition. For a full Lahori spread, Zam Zam Lahori Kitchen on the Danforth covers biryani, paratha, and aloo paratha alongside the main plates.

Is Pakistani food halal?

Virtually all Pakistani restaurants in Toronto serve exclusively halal meat — it's not a special designation but a baseline expectation of the cuisine and its primary audience. Lahori Xpress explicitly markets itself as a halal kitchen; the others operate in the same tradition without needing to flag it separately. If you're confirming for a specific dietary requirement, call ahead, but it would be unusual to find a Pakistani restaurant in Toronto that is not fully halal.

Alcohol is typically not served. The default drinks are lassi (yogurt-based, sweet or salted), chai, and fresh juices. Some locations offer mango lassi, sugarcane juice, or Rooh Afza (rose-flavoured syrup drink) — these are worth asking about if they're not on the menu.

Where are Pakistani restaurants in Toronto?

New Pakistani licenses in Toronto are more dispersed than the Brampton-anchor narrative suggests. Of the 8 currently verified-open locations tracked by NowServingTO, three are Downtown — Royal Karahi (Queen St E), King Place BBQ & Curry (Parliament St), and Mexi-Pak Fusion (Spadina). East Toronto has Dawat Restaurant & Buffet in Thorncliffe Park and Zam Zam Lahori Kitchen on the Danforth. Etobicoke's Albion Road corridor has Lahori Xpress, Scarborough's Kingston Road has Shaheen Shinwari Karahi, and West Toronto's Queen West has Zafraan Indian Cuisine.

Brampton remains the denser hub for the Greater Toronto Area overall, but new Pakistani kitchens are appearing wherever halal foot traffic and residential density align in Toronto proper — which in 2026 means a city-wide pattern rather than a single corridor.

What is nihari?

Nihari is a slow-cooked beef shank and bone-marrow stew, traditionally made overnight — the bones cook long enough to release their marrow into the broth, producing a sauce that is thick, almost black, and deeply layered with whole spices including star anise, mace, kewra water, and dried ginger. It originated in the royal kitchens of Mughal Delhi as a pre-dawn meal (the word comes from Arabic for "morning") and remains one of the prestige preparations in Pakistani cuisine. A kitchen that serves nihari cooked in a few hours is producing a categorically different dish.

In Toronto, Lahori Xpress on Albion Rd in Etobicoke is the listing most specifically identified with nihari and the Lahori breakfast tradition. King Place BBQ & Curry on Parliament St also lists it. It's typically eaten with a torn piece of naan and garnished with fried onions, fresh ginger, green chilli, and a squeeze of lemon.

About "First seen" dates

"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 ›

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