ontario covid cases

Ontario confirms highest number of new COVID-19 cases so far this month

After many consecutive days with case numbers remaining below the 100 mark, Ontario health officials are reporting 125 new cases of COVID-19 in the province.

This update represents the highest daily increase confirmed in the province since July 31, and Minister of Health Christine Elliott said the uptick is the result of localized increases in Peel, Toronto and Windsor-Essex.

Tuesday morning, Elliott tweeted that there are 17 new cases in Peel, 27 in Toronto and 28 in Windsor-Essex. Still, 27 of the province's 34 public health units are reporting five or fewer cases, while 16 are reporting none at all.

Sadly, four additional deaths have also been confirmed, according to the province's daily Epidemiologic Summary, bringing the total COVID-19 death toll to 2,793. 

Another 90 cases are also considered to be resolved today, leaving just 951 active cases in the province. 

Testing rates, meanwhile, remain decently high, with 23,067 tests processed within Ontario yesterday.

Health officials and Premier Doug Ford have indicated that they won't hesitate to reintroduce stricter safety measures if a concerning spike in cases is observed now that the entire province has entered Stage 3 of reopening, but this would require a repeated pattern to emerge beyond just a single-day surge.

Lead photo by

S.C Air National Guard


Latest Videos



Latest Videos


Join the conversation Load comments

Latest in City

Disturbing video shows Toronto car theft suspect slam into cop and send him flying

Toronto's new park with fake beach and lookout tower to open this summer

People are losing it over driver that lodged their truck under a bridge in downtown Toronto

Several species of lobster-like creatures spreading and causing havoc across Ontario

Ontario is the least satisfied with life out of every Canadian province and it's getting worse

All the ways Canadians will get more money from the government this summer

Toronto news headlines from 1881 are just as weird as today's

Long-closed Toronto park with hidden waterfall won't fully reopen until at least 2026