Gas

Jotul

Norwegian cast iron since 1853. Jotul stoves are the ones that keep burning when the power goes out.

F35 Rockwood

Built by Jotul

Model: F35

59443 BTU

traditional

wood_burning

F445 Holliday

Built by Jotul

Model: F445

55000 BTU

traditional

wood_burning

F500 Oslo

Built by Jotul

Model: F500

70000 BTU

traditional

wood_burning

F55

Built by Jotul

Model: F55

84311 BTU

traditional

wood_burning

F602

Built by Jotul

Model: F602

23415 BTU

traditional

wood_burning

GF 160

Built by Jotul

Model: GF 160

24000 BTU

contemporary

gas

GF 305

Built by Jotul

Model: GF 305

28000 BTU

contemporary

gas

GF 370

Built by Jotul

Model: GF 370

28000 BTU

contemporary

gas

GF 520

Built by Jotul

Model: GF 520

30000 BTU

contemporary

gas

Jotul has been casting iron in Norway since 1853, which makes it far and away the oldest name on our floor. The appeal is simple: these are heavy, honest stoves built by a company that has been solving the same problem, in a colder climate than ours, for well over a century.

What we stock

The F-series wood stoves include the F602 Little Giant, the F445 Holliday, the F500 Oslo and the F55 Carrabassett. On the gas side, the GF 305, GF 370, GF 160 and GF 520 bring the same cast iron styling to a gas stove. The GF 370 runs without electricity and offers a three-sided view.

Who it suits

A Jotul suits someone who wants a stove as an object as much as an appliance, and who values the fact that a cast iron stove keeps working through an ice storm. If you are weighing a wood stove, our wood stove installation cost guide covers what the chimney side of the job really costs.

We sell, install and service Jotul across Toronto and the GTA, including units we did not supply. See our installation, maintenance and repair services, or visit the showroom to see what is burning.

Frequently asked questions

Jotul is Norwegian, founded in 1853 near what is now Oslo, with its head office in Fredrikstad. It has been making cast iron stoves and fireplaces ever since.

The GF 370 requires no electricity to operate, so it keeps burning and keeps the room warm during an outage. That is a genuinely useful trait in a Toronto winter.