Skip to main content

Income Percentile British Columbia

Updated

British Columbia offers stunning natural beauty, a mild Pacific coast climate, and some of Canada’s most dynamic industries. However, it also has some of the country’s highest living costs—particularly in Metro Vancouver, where housing prices have created a challenging affordability landscape. With a population of approximately 5.4 million (2024), BC is Canada’s third most populous province and third largest economy.

British Columbia income percentile table

The table below shows what income is needed to reach each percentile in British Columbia. These figures are derived from Statistics Canada census and tax filer data.

Percentile Individual Income Meaning
10th $5,000 90% of British Columbians earn more
20th $13,000 Part-time and seasonal workers
25th $17,000 Lower quartile
30th $21,000
40th $30,000
50th (Median) $39,000 Half earn more, half earn less
60th $49,000
70th $61,000
75th $68,000 Upper quartile
80th $78,000
90th $108,000 Top 10% of earners
95th $150,000 Top 5%
99th $260,000+ Top 1%

Based on Statistics Canada data. Includes all persons aged 15+ with income.

BC income statistics

Metric Individual Household
Median Income $39,000 $74,000
Average Income $53,000 $98,000
Top 10% Threshold $108,000 $175,000
Top 1% Threshold $260,000 $420,000

The gap between BC’s median ($39,000) and average ($53,000) individual income—36%—reflects substantial income inequality. Vancouver’s concentration of tech wealth, real estate gains, and high-earning professionals creates a long right tail in the income distribution.

British Columbia’s economy has undergone dramatic transformations over the past century, shaping today’s income patterns.

The resource extraction era (1900-1980)

BC’s early prosperity came from “extraction industries”—forestry, mining, fishing, and later oil and gas:

  • 1950s-1970s: Resource sector jobs provided middle-class incomes without requiring advanced education
  • Forestry peak: In 1980, over 90,000 British Columbians worked in forestry and logging
  • Union influence: Strong labour unions in resource industries established BC as one of Canada’s higher-wage provinces

During this era, BC’s median income typically exceeded the national average by 5-10%.

The transition period (1980-2000)

Global competition and environmental concerns disrupted BC’s resource-dependent economy:

Industry 1980 Employment 2000 Employment Change
Forestry/Logging 90,000 55,000 -39%
Mining 25,000 12,000 -52%
Fishing 15,000 8,000 -47%
Film/TV 2,000 25,000 +1,150%
Technology 5,000 50,000 +900%

The 1990s saw the emergence of Vancouver’s tech industry and film production, but these sectors initially employed fewer people at polarized wage levels.

The Vancouver real estate boom (2000-present)

Vancouver’s housing market has dominated BC’s economic narrative for two decades:

Year Avg Vancouver Home Price Annual Growth Median Income
2000 $290,000 $30,000
2005 $470,000 +12%/yr $32,000
2010 $580,000 +4%/yr $35,000
2015 $750,000 +5%/yr $37,000
2020 $1,040,000 +7%/yr $38,000
2024 $1,200,000 +4%/yr $39,000

Home prices have grown 313% since 2000 while median incomes have grown only 30%—a fundamental decoupling that defines BC’s affordability crisis.

Income trend analysis (2000-2024)

Year Median Individual Growth Rate Inflation-Adjusted
2000 $30,000 $42,000 (2024$)
2005 $32,000 +6.7% $42,500 (2024$)
2010 $35,000 +9.4% $42,200 (2024$)
2015 $37,000 +5.7% $41,800 (2024$)
2019 $38,500 +4.1% $41,500 (2024$)
2024 $39,000 +1.3% $39,000

In inflation-adjusted terms, BC median incomes have actually declined over the past two decades. This combination of stagnant real wages and surging housing costs explains much of the province’s affordability challenges.

Income by major BC cities

City Median Individual Median Household Top 10% Top 1%
Vancouver $42,000 $76,000 $120,000 $275,000
Victoria $40,000 $72,000 $108,000 $230,000
Surrey $37,000 $78,000 $105,000 $220,000
Burnaby $38,000 $70,000 $110,000 $240,000
Kelowna $36,000 $68,000 $100,000 $210,000
Abbotsford $34,000 $72,000 $95,000 $190,000
Nanaimo $34,000 $65,000 $92,000 $185,000
Kamloops $36,000 $70,000 $98,000 $195,000
Prince George $38,000 $75,000 $105,000 $200,000

Vancouver’s higher individual income reflects its tech sector and professional services concentration. Surrey shows higher household incomes due to larger household sizes (multi-generational families). Prince George’s relatively strong incomes stem from its role as northern BC’s resource industry hub.

Income by age group in British Columbia

BC shows distinct income patterns by age:

Age Group Median Individual 75th Percentile 90th Percentile
18-24 $14,000 $26,000 $40,000
25-34 $40,000 $62,000 $88,000
35-44 $48,000 $76,000 $112,000
45-54 $50,000 $80,000 $118,000
55-64 $44,000 $74,000 $115,000
65+ $28,000 $48,000 $78,000

Peak earning years in BC (45-54) coincide with peak housing costs, creating financial pressure for middle-aged families. Young adults (18-24) face especially difficult conditions, with entry-level wages insufficient for independent living in Vancouver.

Income by gender in British Columbia

Metric Men Women Gap
Median income $46,000 $33,000 28%
Average income $62,000 $43,000 31%
Top 10% threshold $125,000 $88,000 30%

BC’s gender pay gap (28%) is slightly below the national average (30%), partly due to the province’s stronger public sector and healthcare industries where wage equity is better enforced. The tech sector, while male-dominated, has also attracted more women to high-paying roles than traditional resource industries.

Key industries driving BC incomes

Technology

Vancouver has emerged as Canada’s second-largest tech hub, often called “Silicon Valley North”:

Role BC Average % Above Provincial Median
Software Developer $100,000 +156%
Data Scientist $110,000 +182%
Product Manager $120,000 +208%
DevOps Engineer $105,000 +169%
UX Designer $82,000 +110%

Major tech employers include Amazon (8,000+ employees), Microsoft, SAP, Hootsuite, and Shopify. The sector employs approximately 120,000 British Columbians and has been the primary driver of high-income job growth.

Film and television

“Hollywood North” generates over $3 billion annually in BC, employing 70,000+ workers:

Role Typical Salary Range
Camera operator $60,000-$100,000
Director (episodic TV) $150,000-$300,000
Grip/Electric $55,000-$85,000
Post-production $50,000-$90,000
VFX artist $65,000-$110,000

Vancouver hosts productions for major studios including Netflix, Disney, and Warner Bros., making it one of the world’s largest production centers.

Real estate and construction

BC’s housing boom has created substantial employment and income:

Role Typical Income
Real estate agent (median) $45,000
Real estate agent (top 10%) $180,000+
Construction manager $95,000
Electrician $72,000
Plumber $70,000

However, real estate agent income is highly variable—the median ($45,000) reflects that most agents part-time or new entrants, while top performers earn well into six figures.

Healthcare

BC’s healthcare sector provides stable, well-compensated employment:

Role Typical Salary
Registered Nurse $80,000
Nurse Practitioner $108,000
Family Physician $190,000-$290,000
Specialist Physician $320,000-$550,000
Pharmacist $95,000

Healthcare employs over 200,000 British Columbians and faces significant labour shortages, driving wage growth.

Resource extraction (legacy)

While diminished, resource industries remain significant in northern and interior BC:

Industry Employment Average Wage
Forestry/Logging 30,000 $65,000
Mining 18,000 $95,000
Natural gas 8,000 $110,000
Pulp and paper 6,000 $72,000

These jobs provide middle-class incomes in communities where housing costs are dramatically lower than Vancouver.

BC vs national income comparison

Percentile BC Canada Difference % Higher/Lower
10th $5,000 $5,000 $0 0%
25th $17,000 $18,000 -$1,000 -6%
Median (50th) $39,000 $40,500 -$1,500 -4%
75th $68,000 $70,000 -$2,000 -3%
90th $108,000 $110,000 -$2,000 -2%
99th $260,000 $250,000 +$10,000 +4%

BC’s median income is slightly below the national average, but the top 1% threshold exceeds it—reflecting the province’s income polarization. Lower percentiles are held down by BC’s large service and tourism sectors, while the tech industry elevates the top.

The BC income-housing disconnect

British Columbia, especially Metro Vancouver, demonstrates the widest gap between incomes and housing costs in Canada. This “disconnect” fundamentally shapes the province’s quality of life.

Housing affordability analysis

City Median Household Income Average Home Price Price-to-Income Ratio
Vancouver $76,000 $1,200,000 15.8x
Victoria $72,000 $850,000 11.8x
Kelowna $68,000 $750,000 11.0x
Kamloops $70,000 $550,000 7.9x
Prince George $75,000 $425,000 5.7x
National avg $78,000 $660,000 8.5x

Vancouver’s price-to-income ratio of 15.8x is among the highest in the developed world—comparable to Hong Kong and Sydney.

What income do you need to live in Vancouver?

Housing Type Price/Rent Required Income % of BC Households
1BR apartment (rent) $2,400/month $80,000 62%
2BR apartment (rent) $3,200/month $107,000 45%
Condo (buy) $700,000 $140,000 30%
Townhouse (buy) $1,100,000 $180,000 18%
Detached house (buy) $1,700,000 $280,000 8%

Required income assumes 30% of gross income spent on housing.

Only 8% of BC households have sufficient income to afford a detached house in Vancouver, explaining why much of the city’s housing demand comes from investors, foreign buyers, and families with substantial equity from previous homes.

Purchasing power comparisons

How far does $100,000 go in different BC communities?

Location $100K Equivalent Purchasing Power
Vancouver $100,000 (baseline)
Victoria $112,000
Kelowna $118,000
Kamloops $135,000
Prince George $145,000
Smithers $155,000

A $100,000 income in Prince George provides roughly equivalent standard of living to $145,000 in Vancouver—45% more real purchasing power.

Income inequality in British Columbia

BC’s Gini coefficient is approximately 0.33—one of the highest in Canada and reflecting substantial inequality.

Income distribution analysis

Share of Total Income Quintile
4.0% Bottom 20%
9.5% Second quintile
15.5% Middle quintile
24.0% Fourth quintile
47.0% Top 20%

The top 20% of British Columbians earn 47% of all income—the highest concentration in Canada (Ontario: 45.5%, national: 44%). This reflects both the tech industry’s high wages and the large service/tourism workforce earning below-median wages.

Wealth vs. income inequality

BC has significant “wealth inequality” distinct from income inequality. Many homeowners who bought before 2015 have accumulated substantial equity, while their current incomes remain modest:

Scenario Income Net Worth
Long-term homeowner, retired $35,000 $1,200,000+
Young tech worker, renting $95,000 $50,000
Dual-income family, recent buyers $140,000 -$200,000 (mortgage)

This wealth disparity between generations—sometimes called the “housing lottery”—creates social tensions and migration patterns as young families leave Vancouver for affordability.

BC taxes and take-home pay

BC’s tax structure affects what you keep from your earnings:

Combined federal and provincial tax rates (2024)

Taxable Income Federal Rate BC Rate Combined
$0-$47,937 15% 5.06% 20.06%
$47,937-$95,875 20.5% 7.70% 28.20%
$95,875-$110,076 26% 10.50% 36.50%
$110,076-$133,664 26% 12.29% 38.29%
$133,664-$173,205 29% 14.70% 43.70%
$173,205-$246,752 29% 16.80% 45.80%
$246,752+ 33% 20.50% 53.50%

BC’s top marginal rate of 53.5% applies to income over $246,752—among the highest in Canada.

Example take-home pay calculations

Gross Income Federal Tax BC Tax CPP/EI Take-Home Effective Rate
$50,000 $5,200 $2,100 $4,100 $38,600 23%
$75,000 $9,500 $4,300 $4,900 $56,300 25%
$100,000 $14,500 $7,100 $4,900 $73,500 27%
$150,000 $26,000 $14,500 $4,900 $104,600 30%
$200,000 $39,000 $24,000 $4,900 $132,100 34%

Use our BC income tax calculator for personalized calculations.

Migration patterns and income

BC’s affordability crisis has created significant migration patterns:

Interprovincial migration (2019-2024)

Flow Net Migrants Typical Income Impact
BC → Alberta +25,000 Higher real income
Ontario → BC -5,000 Lower real income, lifestyle choice
BC → Atlantic +8,000 Remote work opportunities

Many British Columbians have relocated to Alberta for higher incomes and lower housing costs. The shift accelerated during COVID-19 as remote work expanded options.

Immigration and income

BC receives approximately 18% of Canada’s immigrants despite being home to only 13% of the population. New immigrants to BC typically start at lower income percentiles:

Years Since Arrival Median Income % of Provincial Median
0-1 years $22,000 56%
2-5 years $32,000 82%
6-10 years $38,000 97%
10+ years $42,000 108%

Immigrants who remain in BC long-term eventually exceed provincial median income, reflecting educational attainment and entrepreneurship.

Future outlook for BC incomes

Positive factors

  • Tech expansion: Continued growth of AI/ML and software development sectors
  • Clean energy: BC positions itself for green economy jobs
  • Trans Mountain Pipeline: Limited revenue but supports construction employment
  • Immigration: Continued population growth supports labour market
  • Remote work: Enables high earners to live outside Vancouver

Challenges

  • Housing affordability: Continues to erode real income gains and drive out-migration
  • Aging population: Particularly acute in rural communities
  • Resource industry decline: Forestry and mining continue long-term contraction
  • Climate change: Wildfires and floods threaten communities and industries
  • High taxation: Top marginal rates may deter some high earners

Most economists expect BC incomes to grow modestly in nominal terms (2-3% annually) while real purchasing power remains constrained by housing costs.

Improving your income percentile in BC

High-demand occupations (2024)

Occupation Median Salary Job Openings Education Required
Software Developer $100,000 10,000+/year Diploma or degree
Registered Nurse $80,000 8,000+/year Bachelor’s degree
Electrician $72,000 4,000+/year Apprenticeship
Heavy Equipment Operator $68,000 3,000+/year Certification
Project Manager $95,000 3,500+/year Degree + experience
Data Analyst $72,000 4,000+/year Bachelor’s degree

Geographic strategy

Income Level Best Value Locations
$40,000-$60,000 Kamloops, Prince George, Nanaimo, Terrace
$60,000-$80,000 Kelowna, Victoria (with roommate), Abbotsford
$80,000-$100,000 Victoria, Kelowna, Surrey
$100,000+ Vancouver competitive; consider Fraser Valley

Remote work has opened new possibilities—tech workers earning Vancouver salaries while living in the Okanagan or on Vancouver Island enjoy substantially better quality of life.

Education pathways

  • BCIT: Highly regarded polytechnic with strong tech and trades programs
  • SFU and UBC: Research universities with tech industry connections
  • Trades training: ITA BC oversees apprenticeships in 100+ trades
  • Bootcamps: Lighthouse Labs, BrainStation for career changers
🏠

Get the best mortgage rate in Canada — in minutes

Homewise negotiates with 30+ banks and lenders for you. Free, 5 minutes, no credit check.

Get Started →