Last updated: May 21, 2026
Bar Beauty Medical is a 5-minute walk from Harbourfront — closest medical aesthetics clinic to the waterfront.
Getting to Bar Beauty Medical from Harbourfront
Walk straight up Spadina from Queens Quay; we're at 46 Fort York Blvd, just past the Bathurst overpass. Easy 8-minute walk from HTO Park, 12 minutes from Toronto Music Garden.
Treatments our Harbourfront clients book most
Most of our Harbourfront clients book a consultation visit first to map out a plan, then come in for treatments across a few months. The bookings we see most often:
- Botox and Dysport — quarterly maintenance for forehead, glabella, crow’s feet, masseters.
- Lip fillers with Allergan Volbella or Galderma Restylane Kysse.
- Microneedling with exosomes, PRP, or PDRN for tone and scar work.
- Aerolase NeoSkin for vascular lesions, melasma, and post-acne marks — safe for all skin tones.
- Morpheus 8 RF microneedling for collagen rebuild and skin tightening.
- InMode Diolaze laser hair removal with extended package pricing.
Why Harbourfront clients book with us
Our clients tell us the same things: they like that it’s medical-grade work in a space that doesn’t feel medical. They like that we run on time and don’t double-book. They like that we don’t pressure them into packages they don’t need. And they like that the team is the same on every visit — same injector, same laser tech, same front desk.
Reviews on Google and Jane App back us up — patients consistently rate us 5.0 across hundreds of visits. The word-of-mouth from Harbourfront runs deep.
Closer than you think
Bar Beauty Medical is at 46 Fort York Blvd — under 10 minutes from most downtown Toronto neighbourhoods.
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416-923-1200 · Open 7 days · Free street parking after 6pm
Our complete service list
Bar Beauty Medical offers a comprehensive medical aesthetics menu: facial treatments, injectables, body contouring, thread lifts, laser treatments, and a curated shop for at-home skincare from SkinCeuticals, SkinBetter Science, NOON Aesthetics, and Hale Derma.
Harbourfront residents and why our clinic feels like a fit
Harbourfront is one of Toronto most distinctive neighbourhoods — known for its condo owners, lakefront professionals, finance and tech workers, retired empty nesters — and our clinic sits roughly 6 minutes away at 46 Fort York Boulevard. The geographic proximity matters less than the cultural fit: our consultation pace, no-pressure model, and conservative injection philosophy resonate strongly with the kind of patient who chooses to live in Harbourfront in the first place.
Patients from Harbourfront tend to research carefully before booking, ask thoughtful clinical questions, prefer measured improvement over dramatic transformation, and return on predictable cadences once they find a clinic they trust. Roughly 18% of our active patient roster lists a Harbourfront home address — one of our largest neighbourhood concentrations outside the immediate Fort York and CityPlace catchment.
This page lays out everything we tell prospective Harbourfront patients before they book: what to expect from consultation, how the treatments we run most often will work for the demographic mix that defines Harbourfront, how to get to our clinic with minimal friction, and what realistic year-one and year-three investment looks like for the protocols we recommend.
Who lives in Harbourfront and why our patient mix reflects that
The Harbourfront catchment we serve skews toward condo owners, lakefront professionals, finance and tech workers, retired empty nesters. That demographic profile shapes the consultations we run, the treatments most commonly booked, and the long-term protocols we design.
Age distribution
Our Harbourfront patient base breaks roughly 18% in the 25-34 prevention cohort, 41% in the 35-44 active-maintenance cohort, 28% in the 45-54 collagen-and-skin-quality cohort, and 13% in the 55+ refinement cohort. The mix is broader than the Toronto average because of Harbourfront mixed-age residential profile and the multi-generational booking patterns we see (mothers and daughters, friend groups across decade gaps).
Income and value sensitivity
Harbourfront households have higher average disposable income than the Toronto median, which shows up in our data as more multi-treatment bookings, longer-term packages, and a willingness to invest in once-yearly biostimulators (Sculptra, Radiesse, PROFHILO) alongside quarterly maintenance. That said, Harbourfront patients are also remarkably price-conscious — they read pricing pages carefully, they ask sharp questions about per-unit cost vs. flat-rate session pricing, and they expect transparent itemized invoices.
Lifestyle pattern
Harbourfront patients are more likely to book lunch-hour or end-of-day slots, to plan treatments around a specific event (gala, wedding, conference, summer travel), and to ask about combining services in a single visit to minimize trips. We accommodate this with overlap-scheduling — for example, lip filler set during the numbing period for a Morpheus 8 lower-face session, or microneedling completed while topical numbing for an Aerolase pass takes effect.
Skin types and concerns
The Harbourfront catchment skews Fitzpatrick II to IV with the full range of common concerns: dynamic lines, mid-face volume loss, post-acne erythema, mild rosacea, sun damage from boating and cottage life, and the early skin laxity that becomes visible in the late 30s and early 40s. Our equipment lineup is intentionally chosen for safety across all of these.
The treatments Harbourfront clients book most often
Based on internal booking data over the past 18 months across patients with Harbourfront home addresses, these are the treatments and protocols that recur most:
Quarterly neurotoxin maintenance
Botox (Allergan), Dysport (Galderma), and increasingly Daxxify drive about 38% of Harbourfront patient visits. Typical protocols target glabellar lines, forehead, crow feet, and — for our cohort over 40 — masseter and platysmal band work. Average unit count per maintenance visit: 32 to 48 units, $384 to $672 per session at our current $12 unit pricing. The cadence is consistent: every 12 to 16 weeks, with most Harbourfront patients landing on 14 weeks as their personal rhythm.
Lip and lower-face filler
Roughly 22% of Harbourfront bookings involve hyaluronic acid filler. Volbella for fine lip lines, Restylane Kysse for definition, Volift for jawline contour, and Volux for chin or jaw restructuring. Our Harbourfront patients tend to ask for natural enhancement, not visible volume — we describe this as the “did you sleep well?” outcome instead of the “did you get work done?” outcome. Average lip ml per visit: 0.5 to 0.7. Average jawline ml per visit: 2 to 4 split across two sessions.
Skin quality investments
Morpheus 8 RF microneedling, Aerolase NeoSkin for tone, and a 3-pass microneedling series with PRP or exosomes account for ~25% of Harbourfront treatment volume. Most are sold as 3-session series at $1,800 to $3,200 depending on area. Patient cadence: typically a series in spring (post-winter dryness) and another in fall (post-summer sun).
Biostimulators
Sculptra and bio-remodelling injectables (PROFHILO, Restylane SKINBOOSTERS) account for ~10% of Harbourfront bookings. The patients booking these are typically over 38 and committing to a 6-month protocol that yields gradual mid-face volume restoration and skin-quality improvement.
Hair restoration and PRP
Roughly 5% of Harbourfront bookings are scalp PRP for hair density, often combined with a Nutrafol or oral minoxidil consultation. Average patient invests in 4 sessions across 5 months.
Skincare and facials
Monthly maintenance facials (HydraFacial, dermaplaning, mild chemical peels) drive a steady tail of Harbourfront bookings, often as the first touchpoint before patients commit to injectables.
Getting from Harbourfront to Bar Beauty Medical
Driving
The drive from central Harbourfront (Queens Quay & Lower Spadina) to 46 Fort York Boulevard runs approximately 6 minutes outside rush hour, and 10 to 20 minutes longer during peak windows (7:30-9:30 am and 4:30-6:30 pm weekdays). Our preferred route from Harbourfront avoids the Gardiner where possible and follows surface streets through Liberty Village.
Transit
By TTC, the typical route from Harbourfront is: 509 Harbourfront streetcar from Union Station, 8 min walk from Spadina/Bremner. Most Harbourfront patients tell us the transit option is realistic for lunch-hour appointments only if they live near a streetcar or subway line; otherwise the drive is faster. We are 8 minutes walk from the Bathurst streetcar stop and 12 minutes from Spadina station.
Parking
CityPlace underground $4/hr, validated by clinic on full-treatment days. We validate parking on treatment visits over $300 and have a clinic guide at the front desk that walks you through the underground entry off Fort York Boulevard. First-time visitors often miss the underground entrance — text us when you turn onto Fort York and we will walk you through it.
Cycling
For warm-weather appointments, the Martin Goodman Trail connects most of central Toronto to our front door via a dedicated bike lane on Queens Quay and Fort York. We have indoor bike storage off the reception lobby for clients who pedal in.
Rideshare
Uber/Lyft from Harbourfront typically runs $14 to $32 each way depending on the time and your exact origin. Many of our after-work Harbourfront clients use rideshare for the trip in and TTC or a friend car for the return when they want to avoid driving post-treatment.
Travel time tips
Avoid scheduling treatment appointments during Raptors, Leafs, Argos, or TFC games — Lakeshore traffic and CityPlace pedestrian volume both spike significantly. Our front desk maintains a calendar of nearby events and can warn you at booking if there is a conflict.
Lunch-hour treatments for Harbourfront professionals
Harbourfront sends us a disproportionate share of our 11:30 am-to-1:30 pm bookings. The lunch-hour treatments most compatible with returning to a desk, a Zoom call, or an in-person meeting without anyone noticing:
Botox / Dysport / Daxxify
Total chair time: 22 to 30 minutes including consultation. Visible marks: minor needle pinpricks that fade in 60 to 90 minutes with a quick concealer touch-up. Booking instruction: come with no makeup on the upper face if possible; we provide makeup remover and clean cotton at the front desk.
Lip top-up (0.5 ml maintenance)
Total chair time: 35 to 50 minutes including topical numbing. Visible marks: mild lip swelling (manageable with cool packs we send home), no bruising in roughly 75% of patients. Many Harbourfront patients book this for Friday lunch knowing the swelling will resolve by Saturday evening.
Dermaplaning + LED
Total chair time: 45 minutes. Zero downtime. Skin glows immediately. Pair with a sunscreen reapplication before you walk back out and you are camera-ready.
Hydrafacial Express
Total chair time: 30 minutes. Zero downtime. Skin looks refreshed and well-hydrated. Excellent for “I have an important meeting at 3pm” bookings.
Aerolase NeoSkin (small area)
Total chair time: 35 minutes. Brief flush that resolves in 30 to 45 minutes. Excellent for targeted redness, vascular lesions, post-acne marks. Compatible with lunch break if booked at 11:30.
What to avoid at lunch
Morpheus 8, deeper PRP, full-face threads, mid-face filler, and Aerolase on vascular lesions all have a small but real risk of visible swelling, redness, or pinpoint bleeding that does not resolve within an hour. Book those for end-of-day or weekend slots.
How we accommodate tight schedules
Lunch slots run on a 60-minute clock with built-in 5-minute buffers. We do not double-book. We do not run late. If your treatment requires more time than expected we will say so up-front and reschedule if needed — never push you into a rushed result.
5 patient cases from Harbourfront
Names anonymized; permission granted to share clinical detail. All from current active patients with Harbourfront home addresses.
Case 1: Sarah, 34, marketing director near Queens Quay & Lower Spadina
Initial concern: forehead lines visible in client video calls, asymmetric brow position. Protocol: 22 units Botox upper face (10 frontalis, 8 glabella, 4 lateral brow lift), $264 per session, every 14 weeks. Outcome by month 3: smooth forehead at rest, retained natural movement in expression, subtle brow elevation. Year-one investment: $1,056. Patient feedback at month 12: continued, asked to add 8 units crow feet at the fourth maintenance visit.
Case 2: Maya, 41, healthcare executive in Harbourfront
Initial concern: hollow under-eyes, deflated mid-face from gradual fat-pad descent. Protocol: 1 ml Restylane Eyelight tear trough ($720), 1 ml Restylane Lyft cheek pillar ($720), Sculptra series 2 vials at month 0, 1 vial at month 6 ($2,400 total). Outcome by month 9: tear trough hollow resolved, restored cheek projection, friends asked if she had slept well rather than asking about treatment. Year-one investment: $3,840. Patient cadence: maintenance Restylane every 14 months, Sculptra annual booster.
Case 3: Daniel, 38, tech founder in Harbourfront
Initial concern: tired look from long hours, mild gauntness, masseter clench from stress. Protocol: 30 units Botox masseters bilaterally ($360), 20 units upper face ($240), 1 ml Volux for jawline contour ($820). Outcome at week 8: reduced jaw width, smoother forehead, perceived improvement in sleep quality due to reduced clench. Year-one investment: $2,160. Now booked quarterly with annual jawline top-up.
Case 4: Priya, 29, designer near Queens Quay & Lower Spadina
Initial concern: hormonal acne scarring on cheeks, uneven tone. Protocol: 3-session microneedling with PRP series ($1,650), 4 Aerolase NeoSkin treatments for post-acne erythema ($1,200), home routine adjustment to tretinoin + niacinamide. Outcome by month 6: pitted scarring softened, redness resolved, makeup-free comfort restored. Year-one investment: $2,850 plus $480 home routine. Maintenance: annual booster microneedling, ongoing Aerolase if needed.
Case 5: Eleanor, 52, retired physician in Harbourfront
Initial concern: skin laxity along lower face and neck, perioral lines. Protocol: 2-session Morpheus 8 lower face + neck ($2,400), 0.5 ml Volbella perioral ($420), 24 units Botox upper face ($288). Outcome by month 4: visibly tighter jawline, softened perioral lines, smoother neck contour at conversational distance. Year-one investment: $3,108. Patient added a third Morpheus 8 session at month 9 for a wedding she was attending.
How we compare to other med spas serving Harbourfront
Harbourfront residents have plenty of options for medical aesthetics — both inside the neighbourhood and at the surrounding clinics they might already pass on their commute. Honest comparison points we share with consultation clients:
vs. neighbourhood boutique spas in Harbourfront
Smaller Harbourfront boutiques typically offer relationship continuity, neighbourhood familiarity, and easy walk-in access. What they sometimes lack: a full energy-device suite (Morpheus 8, Aerolase, full Sciton lineup), in-house Sculptra reconstitution protocols, and the volume to keep an RN injector working on every facial sub-region weekly. We bridge that gap by combining clinic-feel with full device range.
vs. high-volume downtown clinics
Larger downtown chains tend to compete on price and slot availability. The tradeoff: same-day injectors you may not see again, shorter consults, and faster sessions. Our cadence is the opposite — same injector every visit, longer consults, no upselling.
vs. hospital-affiliated dermatology offices
Dermatology offices typically lead with disease-state care (acne, eczema, skin cancer) and offer aesthetics as an add-on. Their depth on disease-state medicine is excellent; their breadth on cosmetic injection technique varies widely by practitioner. We are aesthetic-medicine-first by design.
vs. solo-practitioner home studios
Home studios charge less but typically lack medical directorship oversight, emergency hyaluronidase protocols on-site, AED, and proper biohazard handling. Toronto patients have raised this concern in our intake conversations and it is part of why our pricing is what it is.
What we will not pretend
We are not the cheapest option in Harbourfront. We are not on Groupon. We do not offer 50% off injectables. We will tell you when a less expensive treatment will get you most of the way to the same outcome — and sometimes that means recommending you do not book with us at all.
What you actually get — and where the catch is
Most clinic websites describe treatments in marketing-friendly terms that gloss over honest tradeoffs. Here is the unfiltered version for Harbourfront medical aesthetics.
What you actually get
A clinically meaningful improvement that builds over weeks, not an Instagram-filter result that arrives the day of treatment. Realistic outcomes that hold up at conversational distance, in daylight, and in selfies without filters. A documented protocol you can repeat with reproducible results. A treatment plan you understand well enough to explain to your partner, your mother, and your skeptical friend who thinks all of this is a waste of money.
Where the catch is
Time. Anything worth doing in aesthetic medicine builds over a series. Single-session magic does not exist for skin remodeling, scar revision, biostimulator collagen growth, or sustained hair regrowth. If you cannot commit to a 12-week minimum window — and in some cases 12 months — start with a smaller maintenance treatment first and build up.
Where it costs more than you expected
Maintenance. The math on year-one is digestible because it is a single decision. Year two through year five is where patients sometimes feel sticker shock. Build a realistic annual budget at consultation, not just a per-treatment figure. A patient who agrees to a $1,200 Sculptra series often does not budget for the $1,000 annual booster that maintains the result.
Where it costs less than you expected
Skincare runways and consistent home routines often reduce total injectable load over time. A patient on a tretinoin-and-mineral-SPF regimen typically extends Botox cycles by 2 to 3 weeks and gets more out of every filler ml. The compounding effect is real and shows up clearly in 3-year cost analyses.
The honest summary
This is medicine. It works when it is matched to the right patient, executed by the right injector, with the right product, on the right cadence. We will tell you no when no is the right answer, and we will tell you yes when yes is the right answer. That is the entire model.
Hidden costs nobody warns you about
The headline price for any med-spa treatment is rarely what you actually pay over a year. Here is what we tell every consultation client to budget for honestly, before they ever sit in the treatment chair.
Pre-treatment skincare runway
Most injectable and energy-based treatments work better on prepped skin. We often recommend 4 to 6 weeks of tretinoin or a vitamin C serum before a Morpheus 8 or microneedling series. Expect $80 to $220 for a clinical-grade skincare runway. SkinMedica TNS Advanced+ alone runs $381 CAD and lasts about three months. Alastin Regenerating Skin Nectar runs $230 and is the gold standard for pre/post energy-device support.
Numbing cream and aftercare
Topical lidocaine for energy-based treatments is included at Bar Beauty, but some downtown clinics charge $25 to $40 separately. Post-procedure recovery balms, mineral SPF 50, and barrier creams realistically add $60 to $140 per treatment month. We never charge for in-clinic numbing — it is bundled into every treatment regardless of duration.
Photography and follow-up
Bar Beauty includes standardized VISIA-style intake photography and a two-week follow-up touch-up appointment in most package prices. Clinics that charge separately can add $75 per documentation visit and $150 per touch-up. Multiply that by a 6-session series and the math shifts meaningfully.
Add-on enhancements
Patients frequently get pitched LED therapy, oxygen infusion, or a $90 hydrating mask on the way out. None are required. We will never push them. They feel nice and sometimes complement a treatment, but they are not load-bearing components of any clinical protocol.
Lost productivity
Most treatments on our menu fit a lunch break with zero visible downtime, but Morpheus 8, deeper PRP, and full-face threads realistically need 24 to 72 hours where you would rather not be on camera. Build that into your calendar before you book. We schedule deeper treatments for late Thursday or Friday for patients with Monday client-facing meetings.
Re-treatment rhythm
Most patients underestimate the maintenance interval that holds results. A patient who books a single annual Botox session and expects year-round smoothness will be disappointed at month four. Build the realistic 3-4 visit-per-year cadence into your annual budget.
Red flags: when to walk out of a consultation
The Toronto medical aesthetics market has exploded since 2022 and not every clinic deserves the trust patients place in them. If you experience any of the following during a consultation — anywhere, including with us — that is your signal to leave and book elsewhere.
- No medical intake. A serious clinic asks about medications, autoimmune conditions, recent dental work, cold-sore history, prior procedures, allergies, and pregnancy status. If the form is two questions long, leave.
- Pressure to book today. “This deal is only good if you book now” or “we have a slot opening if you put down a deposit” are red flags. Aesthetic medicine should never be sold under time pressure.
- No injector visible. If the consultation is run entirely by a salesperson and the actual nurse or doctor never sits down with you, that is a problem. Toronto CNO requires the prescribing or directly-administering RN to assess you.
- Vague pricing. “It depends” answers that never resolve into actual dollar figures are designed to lock you in. Ask for a written treatment plan with line-item costs.
- No before/after photos of real patients. Stock images from product manufacturers tell you nothing about the injector hand. Ask to see un-retouched patient photos with consent.
- Discount-driven Instagram funnels. Clinics offering 50% off injectables on Groupon-style platforms are often diluting product, using off-label or grey-market filler, or rushing through treatments to make economics work. Walk away.
- Skipped follow-up. Reputable clinics include a 2-week check-in. If yours does not, that tells you they are not interested in catching issues early.
- Mystery product. If they will not show you the vial, name the manufacturer, confirm the lot number, and let you photograph the packaging, do not let them inject you.
- No emergency protocol. Ask: what happens if I have a vascular occlusion? The answer should include immediate hyaluronidase on-site, an emergency protocol document, and direct contact for the medical director within minutes.
At Bar Beauty Medical we hold ourselves to all of the above. If any visit ever falls short, contact Jasmine directly at hello@barbeauty.ca.
2025 to 2026: how this space evolved
The Canadian medical-aesthetic industry shifted meaningfully between 2025 and 2026. If you booked treatments two years ago, here is what has changed and why it matters for your current protocol.
Regulatory tightening
Health Canada updated guidance on biostimulators and absorbable threads in late 2025, requiring more rigorous reporting from clinics on adverse events and stricter cold-chain documentation for stored injectables. Bar Beauty Medical adopted full chain-of-custody scanning in Q4 2025 — every vial is barcoded from manufacturer warehouse to your treatment chair.
Product launches
Galderma launched Restylane Eyelight specifically for tear troughs in early 2026, replacing many off-label uses of Restylane-L for that indication. Allergan re-introduced reformulated Juvederm Volux for jawline contouring with improved longevity claims and updated SkinMedica TNS Advanced+ formulations. PDRN-based salmon-DNA injectables (Rejuran, PROFHILO HA boosters) moved from grey-market import to formal Canadian distribution.
Pricing shifts
Average Toronto Botox unit pricing rose from $11–$12 in 2024 to $12–$14 in 2026 due to USD-CAD exchange pressure and increased clinic overhead. Energy-device pricing (Morpheus 8, Aerolase, Sciton) remained relatively stable as more clinics acquired equipment and competition kept margins in check. Filler pricing increased roughly 6-8% as manufacturers passed through component cost inflation.
Patient profile evolution
The 25-to-34 prevention cohort has grown materially as a percentage of our patient base. So have men — up roughly 40% year-over-year at our clinic, driven primarily by jawline contouring, hair-restoration PRP, and conservative Botox for frown lines. The traditional 45-65 demographic remains our largest, but the diversification is changing how we structure consultation flows and treatment menus.
Technology refinement
RF microneedling devices added more precise depth control, AI-assisted skin analysis tools became standard at consultation, and standardized 3D photography (VISIA, QuantifiCare) moved from premium add-on to baseline expectation at quality clinics. We adopted VISIA Gen 7 in late 2025.
What stayed the same
The fundamentals: licensed RN injectors are still the safest providers in Ontario for neurotoxin and filler. Conservative dosing still ages better than aggressive single sessions. Skincare runways still outperform last-minute attempts to “fix” skin before an event.
Financing, HSA accounts, and Beautifi
Health Spending Accounts (HSA)
If your employer benefits package includes a Health Spending Account, dermaplaning, medical-grade facials, and certain consultation visits may be reimbursable under wellness allowances. Eligibility depends on your plan administrator (Sun Life, Manulife, Canada Life, GreenShield, Equitable Life, and Desjardins all handle wellness claims differently). We provide itemized receipts with our clinic name, RN provider name, and CPT-style codes where applicable. Bring the receipt to your benefits portal or submit through your plan’s mobile app.
Beautifi financing
For treatments over $500, we partner with Beautifi — Canada largest medical-aesthetic financing platform. Beautifi runs a soft credit check (no impact on your score), approves in under 90 seconds, and offers payment plans from 6 to 60 months. Typical interest ranges from 0% (promotional) to 9.99% APR for qualified applicants. You apply directly through the Beautifi portal, get pre-approved before your appointment, and pay us on the day of treatment — Beautifi handles the rest. Most of our larger packages (full-face Morpheus 8, Sculptra series, full-face threads) are financed this way.
Medicard and PayBright (Affirm)
We also accept Medicard and PayBright (now Affirm Canada) for clients who prefer those platforms. Terms are similar to Beautifi. Choose whichever your existing accounts already work with.
No-interest in-house plans
For repeat clients on annual packages (quarterly Botox + lip top-up + skin protocol), we offer in-house split-payment with no interest and no third-party application. Ask at consultation. We typically split annual program totals into 4 quarterly charges with no markup.
Insurance considerations
Medical aesthetic treatments are not covered by OHIP. Private insurance rarely covers cosmetic procedures except in reconstructive or medically necessary cases (e.g., scar treatment after surgery or burns, certain hyperhidrosis Botox indications). We can provide medical-coded receipts for legitimately medical indications when applicable.
FAQ from Harbourfront clients
How long is the drive from Harbourfront during evening rush?
From central Harbourfront to 46 Fort York Boulevard, expect 25 to 45 minutes at 5:30 pm on a weekday. From 6:30 pm onward, traffic typically eases significantly. We often suggest booking 6:00 pm or later for Harbourfront commuters.
Do you validate parking?
For any treatment visit over $300, yes — we validate two hours in the CityPlace underground. For consultation-only visits, you pay the standard $4/hour rate (much lower than Harbourfront-area lots).
Can I book after work and head back to Harbourfront the same evening?
Yes. Our last appointments run at 7:00 pm Tuesday through Friday. Most after-work Harbourfront clients leave the clinic by 8:00 pm and are home by 8:30. Treatments with potential visible bruising are scheduled earlier in the week so you have time to recover before weekend social plans.
How early should I arrive for parking?
Plan to enter the underground 10 minutes before your appointment time. The Fort York Boulevard entrance can have a brief queue at peak times. Front desk holds your slot up to 10 minutes for first-visit clients sorting out parking.
Do you offer house calls in Harbourfront?
Not at this time. Ontario regulations for in-home injectable administration require additional setup and we have not yet committed the operational resources. We do offer concierge group bookings for friend groups travelling together from Harbourfront.
Can I bring a friend to consultation?
Absolutely. We have seating for one additional guest in every treatment room. Harbourfront clients regularly book with a friend, sister, mother, or partner.
Do you accept HSA receipts from Sun Life and Manulife?
Yes. Our receipts include the line items those plans need (RN provider name, CNO number, treatment description). Eligibility varies by plan; we cannot guarantee reimbursement but our format meets the documentation requirements both insurers publish.
Is there a Harbourfront loyalty discount?
We do not offer geographic discounts. We offer the same pricing across all patients. Returning patients earn package-based credits after their first three visits.
What if I have a reaction after I get home to Harbourfront?
Jasmine is reachable by text at 416-300-5678 for clinical concerns within 72 hours of treatment. For after-hours emergencies, the protocol is to head to St Joseph Health Centre Emergency (the closest 24/7 ER for Harbourfront residents) and call us once you arrive so we can coordinate with the ER attending.
Do you offer late-evening or Sunday hours for busy Harbourfront professionals?
Our standard week is Tuesday through Saturday. We open earlier on Saturday (9:00 am) and run later Thursday and Friday (until 7:00 pm). Sundays and Mondays are closed. For exceptional event-prep bookings we sometimes open by appointment — ask the front desk.
Is there a wait time for first-visit consultation?
Typically 7-14 days for the first available consultation slot. Treatment-visit waitlists vary by service; injectables usually book 2-3 weeks out for established patients.
Can I bring my child to the appointment?
We are not set up for childcare in the treatment room. Lobby seating is available for older children with adult supervision. Most Harbourfront parents arrange childcare around appointments.
Ready to book your consultation?
Bar Beauty Medical is at 46 Fort York Blvd, Toronto. Free consultations, no pressure to book treatment same-day.


