Environment Canada issued heat warnings for every part of Ontario on the morning of July 13, 2026. The alert splits the province in two: an orange-level warning covers much of the north — Kenora, Thunder Bay, Fort Hope and Timmins — where daytime highs could reach 36 C with humidex values making it feel like 42. A less severe yellow-level warning covers the south, including Toronto, Waterloo Region, Guelph, Windsor, North Bay and Ottawa, with temperatures also expected to reach nearly 36 C. Forecasters expect the event to peak Tuesday, July 14, and hold through Wednesday or Thursday.
For homeowners running central air conditioning or a heat pump — the vast majority of the province — the warning is not only a health story. It is a cost story and an equipment story. A stretch of humidex-42 days is what pushes a cooling system into sustained peak-load operation, and that operation shows up on the July bill. It also stress-tests the equipment itself. A unit that has run through a mild June without complaint can fail on the day it is asked to work hardest.
This piece stays close to that lens: what the warning covers, why a multi-day humidex-42 stretch matters financially, what to check on the equipment before Tuesday afternoon, and which passive moves quietly reduce the load. For symptoms and personal-health protocols, follow the alert language directly from Environment Canada.