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Cost of Living by Province in Canada (2026 Comparison)

Updated

How much does it cost to live in each Canadian province? This guide compares housing, taxes, childcare, and overall cost of living to help you decide where to live — or see how your province stacks up.

Cost of living index by province

This index compares the overall cost of living in each province relative to the Canadian national average (100). A score of 110 means 10% more expensive than average.

Province Cost of Living Index Rank (1 = Cheapest)
Quebec 88 1
New Brunswick 91 2
Manitoba 92 3
Nova Scotia 93 4
Saskatchewan 95 5
Prince Edward Island 96 6
Newfoundland & Labrador 97 7
Alberta 98 8
Ontario 108 9
British Columbia 118 10

Index based on housing costs, taxes, childcare, groceries, transportation, and utilities weighted by typical household spending.

Housing costs by province

Housing is the largest expense for most Canadians and varies dramatically by province. This comparison uses average home prices and average rents for a 2-bedroom apartment.

Province Avg Home Price Avg Rent (2BR) Home Price Rank
British Columbia $989,000 $2,450 10 (most expensive)
Ontario $878,000 $2,200 9
Alberta $498,000 $1,650 8
Quebec $485,000 $1,350 7
Prince Edward Island $395,000 $1,400 6
Nova Scotia $420,000 $1,550 5
Manitoba $365,000 $1,350 4
Saskatchewan $335,000 $1,250 3
New Brunswick $325,000 $1,300 2
Newfoundland & Labrador $295,000 $1,100 1 (cheapest)

To afford these homes: With a 20% down payment at 5% interest over 25 years, here’s the approximate household income needed:

Province Income Needed to Afford Avg Home
British Columbia $195,000
Ontario $175,000
Alberta $105,000
Quebec $100,000
Atlantic Provinces $75,000 - $90,000
Prairies (MB, SK) $75,000 - $85,000

Taxes by province

Your tax burden varies significantly by province. This table compares total tax paid on a $100,000 salary (2026 rates).

Province Income Tax on $100K Sales Tax Total Tax Rank
Alberta $23,300 5% GST 1 (lowest)
Saskatchewan $24,100 11% PST+GST 2
Ontario $24,800 13% HST 3
British Columbia $25,200 12% PST+GST 4
Manitoba $27,100 12% PST+GST 5
New Brunswick $27,500 15% HST 6
Nova Scotia $28,200 15% HST 7
Newfoundland & Labrador $28,900 15% HST 8
Prince Edward Island $29,100 15% HST 9
Quebec $29,800 14.975% QST+GST 10 (highest)

Important: Quebec’s high income taxes are partially offset by lower costs in other areas (childcare, housing, auto insurance, hydro).

Childcare costs by province

Childcare costs can make or break a family budget. Quebec’s subsidized system is an outlier.

Province Avg Monthly Childcare (Infant) Annual Cost Notes
Quebec $190 $2,280 Subsidized $8.70/day
All other provinces $1,200 - $2,000 $14,400 - $24,000 Federal $10/day rollout ongoing

Quebec advantage: A family with two kids saves approximately $25,000-$40,000 per year in childcare costs alone compared to Ontario or BC.

The federal $10/day childcare program is being phased in across other provinces but is not yet fully available everywhere (target: 2026).

Groceries and household expenses

Province Monthly Groceries (Family of 4) Grocery Index
Quebec $1,050 95
Ontario $1,150 104
Alberta $1,100 100
British Columbia $1,200 109
Manitoba $1,080 98
Saskatchewan $1,070 97
Atlantic Provinces $1,120 101

Grocery costs are relatively similar across provinces, with BC being most expensive and Quebec/Prairies being cheapest.

Utilities and energy costs

Province Avg Monthly Electricity Avg Monthly Natural Gas Notes
Quebec $85 N/A Cheapest hydro in North America
Manitoba $95 $65 Manitoba Hydro rates low
British Columbia $110 $75 BC Hydro rates rising
Ontario $140 $90 Time-of-use rates
Alberta $145 $110 Deregulated market, variable
Atlantic Provinces $150+ $100+ Higher rates

Quebec and Manitoba benefit from abundant hydroelectric power, keeping electricity costs 40-50% lower than other provinces.

Transportation costs

Province Avg Auto Insurance Avg Gas Price (per L) Public Transit Available
Quebec $720/year $1.55 Montreal, Quebec City
Ontario $1,900/year $1.60 Toronto, Ottawa
Alberta $1,450/year $1.45 Calgary, Edmonton
British Columbia $1,800/year $1.80 Vancouver
Manitoba $1,350/year $1.50 Winnipeg
Saskatchewan $1,200/year $1.48 Limited
Atlantic Provinces $950/year $1.65 Limited

Quebec’s auto insurance is dramatically lower due to the public no-fault insurance system (SAAQ).

Monthly budget comparison: family of 4

What does it actually cost to live in each province? This table compares a middle-class family of 4 (two working adults, two kids, homeowners with mortgage).

Expense BC (Vancouver) Ontario (Toronto) Alberta (Calgary) Quebec (Montreal)
Housing (mortgage) $4,200 $3,800 $2,400 $2,200
Childcare $2,000 $1,800 $1,500 $400
Groceries $1,200 $1,150 $1,100 $1,050
Transportation $1,200 $1,100 $950 $700
Utilities $250 $280 $300 $180
Insurance (home/auto) $450 $400 $350 $230
Other $800 $750 $650 $600
Total Monthly $10,100 $9,280 $7,250 $5,360
Annual Cost $121,200 $111,360 $87,000 $64,320

Quebec is ~$47,000/year cheaper than BC and ~$57,000/year cheaper than Ontario for a typical family, primarily due to childcare and housing.

Best provinces for different situations

Best for young families

  1. Quebec — $8.70/day childcare, low housing, QPIP parental leave
  2. Alberta — Low taxes, affordable housing, strong job market
  3. Manitoba — Very affordable, good family services

Best for retirees

  1. Nova Scotia — Low housing, slower pace, healthcare improving
  2. British Columbia (interior) — Mild climate, outdoor lifestyle
  3. Quebec — Very affordable, cultural amenities

Best for high earners

  1. Alberta — No PST, low income tax, affordable housing
  2. Ontario (outside GTA) — Job opportunities, moderate costs
  3. Saskatchewan — Low taxes, very affordable

Best for remote workers

  1. New Brunswick — Low cost, improving internet, Atlantic lifestyle
  2. Nova Scotia — Affordable, quality of life
  3. Quebec (outside Montreal) — Extremely affordable

Provincial comparison summary

Province Pros Cons
British Columbia Climate, natural beauty, strong economy Extremely expensive housing, high gas prices
Alberta Lowest taxes, affordable housing, high wages Cold winters, economic volatility, car-dependent
Saskatchewan Very affordable, low taxes Cold, limited amenities, distant from major cities
Manitoba Affordable, low utilities Cold winters, mosquitoes, limited job market
Ontario Jobs, diversity, amenities Expensive housing (GTA), high taxes
Quebec Cheapest childcare, low housing, culture French required for many jobs, high income tax
New Brunswick Very affordable, bilingual Limited job market, lower wages
Nova Scotia Affordable, ocean lifestyle Lower wages, limited healthcare access
PEI Beautiful, affordable, friendly Very small, limited jobs
Newfoundland & Labrador Cheapest housing, unique culture Remote, limited jobs, weather