Different GTA regions, different source systems
The GTA includes several public health sources, including Toronto DineSafe, Peel Public Health, YorkSafe, Halton Region Health Department, and Durham Region Health Department.
Each source publishes records with different labels, portals, and levels of detail. Some records show pass or conditional status. Others expose critical and non-critical issue counts or source-specific finding language.
Why matching matters
A restaurant profile is only useful when the inspection history belongs to the right place. Verdine links restaurants to source records using signals such as name, address, postal code, phone, and source lineage.
Strong matching keeps profiles focused and helps genuine inspection history surface with confidence, even when restaurant names or public health records are formatted differently across systems.
How Verdine helps GTA searches
For matched GTA restaurants, Verdine surfaces inspection history, status context, issue summaries, source-specific severity, and repeat findings.
The app is built for the moment before you decide where to eat: search a restaurant, see the inspection context Verdine has organized, and understand whether the recent record is strong, mixed, or cautionary.
GTA coverage also shows why smart matching matters. Restaurant names often appear differently across place discovery and health-unit data, so Verdine uses stronger signals like address, postal code, and source lineage before attaching inspection context to a profile.
That gives GTA users a practical inspection snapshot across multiple public health systems without making every search start from a different regional portal.