A $120,000 salary puts you well above the Canadian average income of approximately $56,000. But whether it’s “good” depends heavily on where you live, your lifestyle expectations, and your financial goals. This guide breaks down what life looks like on $120,000 across Canada.
$120,000 Salary: The Numbers
| Metric | Amount |
|---|---|
| Annual gross | $120,000 |
| Monthly gross | $10,000 |
| Hourly equivalent | $57.69 (40 hrs/wk) |
| Income percentile | Top 10-15% nationally |
After-Tax Take-Home by Province
| Province | Annual After-Tax | Monthly Take-Home |
|---|---|---|
| Alberta | $85,200 | $7,100 |
| Saskatchewan | $83,900 | $6,990 |
| Ontario | $83,500 | $6,960 |
| British Columbia | $83,000 | $6,920 |
| Manitoba | $80,200 | $6,680 |
| Nova Scotia | $79,800 | $6,650 |
| Quebec | $79,500 | $6,625 |
Alberta’s lower taxes mean you keep an extra $5,700 per year compared to Quebec.
Income Percentile: How You Compare
At $120,000, here’s where you rank:
| Comparison Group | Your Percentile |
|---|---|
| All Canadian individuals | Top 10-12% |
| Full-time workers | Top 15-18% |
| Your age group (35-44) | Top 12-15% |
| Households (single person) | Top 8-10% |
You earn more than approximately 85-90% of Canadian workers. This is considered upper-middle class income.
$120,000 Lifestyle by City
Toronto
| Monthly Budget | Amount |
|---|---|
| Take-home pay | $6,960 |
| Rent (1BR downtown) | -$2,600 |
| Utilities & internet | -$150 |
| Groceries | -$500 |
| Transportation | -$200 |
| Phone | -$75 |
| Dining/entertainment | -$400 |
| Insurance | -$100 |
| Remaining to save | $2,935 |
Verdict: Comfortable lifestyle with good savings potential if renting. Home ownership is challenging — the average Toronto home ($1,009,000) would require a dual income or large down payment. A $500,000 condo is more realistic.
Vancouver
| Monthly Budget | Amount |
|---|---|
| Take-home pay | $6,920 |
| Rent (1BR downtown) | -$2,700 |
| Utilities & internet | -$140 |
| Groceries | -$520 |
| Transportation | -$180 |
| Phone | -$75 |
| Dining/entertainment | -$450 |
| Insurance | -$100 |
| Remaining to save | $2,755 |
Verdict: Similar to Toronto. Vancouver’s rent is slightly higher but other costs are comparable. Home ownership requires compromises (smaller condo, further suburbs) or a partner’s income.
Calgary
| Monthly Budget | Amount |
|---|---|
| Take-home pay | $7,100 |
| Rent (1BR downtown) | -$1,700 |
| Utilities & internet | -$180 |
| Groceries | -$450 |
| Transportation | -$300 (car-dependent) |
| Phone | -$75 |
| Dining/entertainment | -$350 |
| Insurance | -$150 |
| Remaining to save | $3,895 |
Verdict: Excellent quality of life. The combination of higher take-home pay and lower rent means you can save aggressively. Home ownership on a single $120K income is realistic — the average Calgary home ($556,000) is affordable with 10-20% down.
Montreal
| Monthly Budget | Amount |
|---|---|
| Take-home pay | $6,625 |
| Rent (1BR downtown) | -$1,800 |
| Utilities & internet | -$120 |
| Groceries | -$450 |
| Transportation | -$150 |
| Phone | -$60 |
| Dining/entertainment | -$350 |
| Insurance | -$100 |
| Remaining to save | $3,595 |
Verdict: Very comfortable. Despite lower take-home (Quebec taxes), Montreal’s lower cost of living provides strong purchasing power. Home ownership is achievable.
Ottawa
| Monthly Budget | Amount |
|---|---|
| Take-home pay | $6,960 |
| Rent (1BR) | -$1,900 |
| Utilities & internet | -$160 |
| Groceries | -$480 |
| Transportation | -$200 |
| Phone | -$75 |
| Dining/entertainment | -$350 |
| Insurance | -$110 |
| Remaining to save | $3,685 |
Verdict: Strong balance of income and affordability. Federal government jobs provide stability. Home ownership is realistic at the average price of $630,000.
Can You Afford a House on $120,000?
Mortgage Qualification
Using the mortgage stress test:
| Factor | Amount |
|---|---|
| Gross income | $120,000 |
| Max GDS ratio (32%) | $38,400/year for housing |
| Max monthly housing cost | $3,200 |
| Approximate mortgage qualification | $500,000 - $600,000 |
Add your down payment to the mortgage amount for maximum purchase price.
Home Affordability by City
| City | Avg Home Price | Affordable on $120K? |
|---|---|---|
| Edmonton | $395,000 | ✅ Yes, comfortably |
| Calgary | $556,000 | ✅ Yes, with 10-15% down |
| Ottawa | $630,000 | ⚠️ Tight, or condo instead |
| Montreal | $525,000 | ✅ Yes, with reasonable down |
| Vancouver | $1,150,000 | ❌ No, condo or dual income |
| Toronto | $1,009,000 | ❌ No, condo or dual income |
In expensive cities, $120,000 earners typically:
- Buy condos ($400K-$600K range)
- Move to suburbs (Brampton, Surrey, etc.)
- Have a working partner contributing income
- Rent indefinitely while investing the difference
$120,000 vs. Average Earners
| Metric | You ($120K) | Average Canadian |
|---|---|---|
| Annual income | $120,000 | $56,100 |
| Monthly after-tax | $6,900 | $4,000 |
| Disposable after rent | $4,200 | $1,500 |
| Annual savings potential | $35,000+ | $5,000-10,000 |
| Time to save $100K down | 3-4 years | 10+ years |
Your higher income provides significantly more financial flexibility and faster wealth accumulation.
What $120,000 Earners Can Do
Building Wealth
At $120,000, you can realistically:
| Financial Goal | Timeline |
|---|---|
| Max out TFSA ($7,000/year) | Easily each year |
| Max out RRSP (~$21,600 at this income) | Achievable annually |
| Save $100,000 down payment | 3-4 years |
| Achieve $500K net worth | 8-12 years with investing |
| Reach FIRE (financial independence) | 15-20 years if aggressive |
Lifestyle Affordability
| Item | Affordable on $120K? |
|---|---|
| $40,000 car (financed) | ✅ Yes |
| $500K condo | ✅ Yes |
| Annual $5,000 vacation | ✅ Yes |
| Supporting a child | ✅ Yes, comfortably |
| Supporting non-working spouse | ⚠️ Depends on location |
| $800K detached home (Toronto/Van) | ❌ Challenging alone |
Careers That Pay $120,000
Jobs in the $115,000-$125,000 range in Canada:
| Career | Typical Path |
|---|---|
| Senior Software Developer | 5-8 years experience |
| Pharmacist | Licensed, 3+ years |
| Nursing Manager | RN + management |
| Senior Accountant (CPA) | 5-7 years post-designation |
| Project Manager (PMP) | 7-10 years experience |
| Government Manager (EX-01) | Federal public service |
| Electrician/Plumber (own business) | Licensed + own clients |
| Sales Account Executive | High performers |
| Data Scientist | 4-6 years experience |
| HR Director | 10+ years experience |
See our salary guides: Software Engineers, Pharmacists, Nurses
Tips for $120,000 Earners
Avoid Lifestyle Inflation
The jump from $60K to $120K often leads to:
- More expensive car (often not needed)
- Larger apartment (1BR → 2BR when not necessary)
- Dining out more (inflates budget quickly)
Keep living like you earn $80K and invest the difference.
Maximize Tax-Advantaged Accounts
| Account | 2026 Contribution Room | Tax Savings at $120K |
|---|---|---|
| RRSP | ~$21,600 (18% of income) | $7,000-$8,500 |
| TFSA | $7,000 | Tax-free growth |
| FHSA | $8,000 | $2,500-$3,000 |
At $120K, RRSP contributions are highly valuable due to your marginal tax rate (37-43% depending on province).
Consider Geographic Arbitrage
If you can work remotely, consider:
- Earning Toronto/Vancouver salaries while living in Calgary, Edmonton, or smaller cities
- The $120K Toronto vs. Calgary comparison shows ~$10,000+/year difference in lifestyle
- Some remote workers are moving to Portugal, Mexico, or Southeast Asia while earning Canadian salaries
Related Resources
- Income Percentile Calculator — See exactly where you rank
- Income Tax Calculator — Calculate your exact take-home
- Mortgage Affordability Calculator — What can you afford?
- RRSP vs TFSA Calculator — Where to invest first
- Cost of Living Toronto — Toronto expenses
- Cost of Living Vancouver — Vancouver expenses
- Cost of Living Calgary — Calgary expenses
- Average Salary in Canada — Benchmark data
- FIRE Calculator — Financial independence planning