A love letter to Nigerian hospitality.

Oyinbo is more than a restaurant. It's the way we feed our families, the way we throw a party, the way we welcome strangers — packaged into a room at 2300 Weston Road.

Oyinbo Bar & Grill Lounge was born from a simple idea: Toronto deserves a Nigerian restaurant that refuses to compromise. Too many West African restaurants soften the pepper, shrink the portions, or fade into a generic "African" menu. We don't.

We cook jollof the way it was cooked at our aunties' engagements — in a heavy pot, with the bottom pushing towards burnt, with the smoke of the firewood still on it. We grill suya with yaji rub, not salt-and-pepper. We pour palm wine from the bottle, not from a pitcher.

The bar follows the same rule. Our cocktails use zobo, palm wine, bitter leaf, hibiscus, Scotch bonnet, and ginger — African pantry first, Western technique in support. The music is afrobeats, amapiano, highlife, and afro-house. The room is built for long tables, loud conversations, and the kind of night people still talk about on Monday.

If you've been looking for a place in Toronto where Lagos feels close, where the kitchen isn't asking for permission, where your birthday gets a proper celebration — welcome home.

"I didn't want to open 'another African restaurant' in Toronto. I wanted to open a place where a Nigerian who just landed from Lagos walks in and says, 'this feels like home.'"

Mola Stanley Ilesanmi Founder & CEO

Food without apology

Traditional Nigerian cooking, uncompromised. Pepper where pepper belongs. Portions that feed you properly.

A craft bar program

Cocktails built around African spirits, spices, and fruits. A wine list that plays well with suya and stew.

A room, not just a restaurant

Sound, lighting, and seating designed for late nights, private events, and the kind of celebration that needs its own playlist.