Introduction
Vancouver is consistently ranked among the world’s most livable cities—and also among its least affordable. The city of Vancouver proper has a population of approximately 675,000, while Metro Vancouver encompasses 2.6 million residents across 21 municipalities stretching from West Vancouver to Langley. Nestled between the Pacific Ocean, coastal mountains, and the US border, Vancouver’s stunning natural setting creates both its appeal and its fundamental constraint: a severe limitation on developable land.
The Vancouver economy has evolved from its resource extraction roots (forestry, mining) into a diversified service economy. Today, the metropolitan area serves as Canada’s Pacific gateway, hosting the country’s largest port, significant film and television production (earning its “Hollywood North” moniker), a growing technology sector, and substantial tourism and real estate industries. However, unlike Toronto’s concentration of corporate headquarters and financial services, Vancouver lacks a dominant high-income industry cluster, creating a persistent mismatch between moderate incomes and extreme housing costs.
Understanding Vancouver income percentiles is crucial because raw income numbers obscure the city’s affordability crisis. A $75,000 salary that would provide comfortable middle-class living in Calgary or Halifax may leave a Vancouver resident unable to afford even a modest condo. This page contextualizes what incomes actually mean in Canada’s most expensive housing market.
Vancouver income percentile table
| Percentile | Individual Income | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 10th | $5,500 | 90% of Vancouverites earn more |
| 20th | $14,000 | Part-time and gig workers |
| 25th | $18,000 | Lower quartile |
| 30th | $23,000 | |
| 40th | $32,000 | |
| 50th (Median) | $42,000 | Half earn more, half earn less |
| 60th | $52,000 | |
| 70th | $65,000 | |
| 75th | $73,000 | Upper quartile |
| 80th | $84,000 | |
| 90th | $120,000 | Top 10% of earners |
| 95th | $165,000 | Top 5% |
| 99th | $280,000+ | Top 1% |
Based on Statistics Canada census data for Vancouver CMA. Note: These figures represent the Census Metropolitan Area including Vancouver proper, Burnaby, Richmond, Surrey, and surrounding municipalities. The City of Vancouver alone shows slightly higher individual incomes but lower household incomes due to more single-person households downtown.
Vancouver income statistics
| Metric | Individual | Household |
|---|---|---|
| Median Income | $42,000 | $76,000 |
| Average Income | $56,000 | $105,000 |
| Top 10% Threshold | $120,000 | $190,000 |
| Top 1% Threshold | $280,000 | $450,000 |
The $14,000 gap between median and average individual income reflects Vancouver’s inequality—high earners in tech, executive positions, and certain professions pull averages up while the typical worker earns far less. Vancouver’s top income thresholds are notably lower than Toronto’s, reflecting the absence of a dominant financial sector.
Historical income trends in Vancouver
Vancouver’s economic history traces from natural resources through to today’s diversified service economy.
Key economic turning points:
- 1986: Expo 86 transformed Vancouver’s global image and sparked urban development
- 1997-1999: Hong Kong handover brought significant investment and immigration
- 2000: Tech boom brought first wave of significant tech employment
- 2008-2009: Financial crisis briefly cooled housing but recovery came quickly
- 2010: Winter Olympics elevated Vancouver’s international profile
- 2015-2019: Foreign buyer taxes and speculation taxes attempted to cool housing
- 2020-2021: Pandemic impacted tourism heavily; tech sector grew
- 2022-2025: Housing remains extreme despite cooling measures; tech maturing
| Year | Median Individual Income | Median Household Income | Notable Events |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2000 | $26,000 | $48,000 | Resource economy transitioning |
| 2005 | $29,000 | $54,000 | Pre-Olympics building boom |
| 2010 | $33,000 | $62,000 | Winter Olympics year |
| 2015 | $37,000 | $68,000 | Foreign buyer surge |
| 2020 | $40,000 | $73,000 | Pandemic tourism crash |
| 2024 | $42,000 | $76,000 | Current baseline |
Unlike Toronto, where finance sector growth drove income gains, Vancouver’s income growth has been modest. Housing prices have grown 5-7x faster than incomes over the past 25 years.
Income by Metro Vancouver area
| Area | Median Individual | Median Household | Top 10% | Key Characteristics |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vancouver (West Side) | $48,000 | $85,000 | $140,000 | Older wealth, UBC proximity |
| Vancouver (East Side) | $38,000 | $62,000 | $105,000 | Working class, gentrifying |
| Downtown Vancouver | $45,000 | $68,000 | $130,000 | Young professionals, high singles |
| West Vancouver | $55,000 | $120,000 | $180,000 | Highest incomes in region |
| North Vancouver | $48,000 | $95,000 | $140,000 | Professional families |
| Burnaby | $38,000 | $70,000 | $110,000 | Mixed, near SkyTrain |
| Richmond | $35,000 | $68,000 | $105,000 | Immigrant families, airport |
| New Westminster | $40,000 | $66,000 | $108,000 | Revitalizing urban center |
| Surrey | $37,000 | $78,000 | $105,000 | Fastest growing, families |
| Coquitlam | $42,000 | $85,000 | $115,000 | Middle-class families |
| Langley | $40,000 | $90,000 | $115,000 | Newer suburbs, larger homes |
| Delta/White Rock | $42,000 | $82,000 | $112,000 | Established suburbs |
West Vancouver consistently shows Metro Vancouver’s highest incomes, reflecting its legacy as an executive and professional enclave. Surrey shows higher household incomes despite lower individual incomes due to larger families and multiple earners per household.
Income by age group in Vancouver
| Age Group | Median Income | 75th Percentile | 90th Percentile |
|---|---|---|---|
| 18-24 | $16,000 | $26,000 | $38,000 |
| 25-34 | $43,000 | $65,000 | $92,000 |
| 35-44 | $50,000 | $78,000 | $118,000 |
| 45-54 | $52,000 | $82,000 | $128,000 |
| 55-64 | $45,000 | $72,000 | $115,000 |
| 65+ | $30,000 | $48,000 | $80,000 |
Vancouver’s age-income curve peaks in the 45-54 range, though the peak is less pronounced than in Toronto. This reflects Vancouver’s economy having fewer senior management positions and executive roles. Young adults in Vancouver earn significantly less than their Toronto counterparts, making early homeownership virtually impossible for most.
Income by gender in Vancouver
| Metric | Men | Women | Gap |
|---|---|---|---|
| Median Income | $46,000 | $37,000 | $9,000 (20%) |
| Average Income | $64,000 | $48,000 | $16,000 (25%) |
| 75th Percentile | $82,000 | $64,000 | $18,000 (22%) |
| 90th Percentile | $135,000 | $100,000 | $35,000 (26%) |
Vancouver’s gender income gap is roughly average for Canadian cities. The gap is smallest in public sector roles (education, healthcare, government) where unionization and pay scales create more equity, and largest in private sector industries like technology and natural resources where men dominate higher-paying technical and management roles.
Key industries driving Vancouver incomes
| Industry | Employment | Median Income | 90th Percentile | Major Employers |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Technology | 120,000 | $82,000 | $165,000 | Amazon, Microsoft, SAP, EA, Hootsuite |
| Film & TV | 70,000 | $55,000 | $120,000 | Netflix productions, major studios |
| Port & logistics | 65,000 | $58,000 | $105,000 | Port of Vancouver, CN, CP |
| Real estate/construction | 95,000 | $52,000 | $110,000 | Concord Pacific, Polygon, Bosa |
| Tourism & hospitality | 100,000 | $32,000 | $55,000 | Hotels, restaurants, attractions |
| Healthcare | 125,000 | $58,000 | $115,000 | VGH, BC Children’s, PHC |
| Education | 85,000 | $52,000 | $92,000 | UBC, SFU, BCIT, school districts |
| Retail trade | 130,000 | $30,000 | $52,000 | Various retailers |
| Natural resources (HQs) | 25,000 | $75,000 | $155,000 | Teck, Goldcorp, mining HQs |
Technology has become Vancouver’s highest-paying major sector, with Amazon’s significant expansion and Microsoft’s presence driving up tech wages. However, Vancouver tech salaries remain 20-30% below comparable Silicon Valley roles.
Film and television provides substantial employment but with highly variable income—star performers and senior technical roles earn well, while many crew positions are seasonal and modest-paying.
Vancouver vs BC and national comparison
| Percentile | Vancouver CMA | British Columbia | Canada | Van vs BC | Van vs Canada |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 25th | $18,000 | $16,000 | $16,000 | +$2,000 | +$2,000 |
| 50th (Median) | $42,000 | $38,000 | $40,500 | +$4,000 | +$1,500 |
| 75th | $73,000 | $66,000 | $70,000 | +$7,000 | +$3,000 |
| 90th | $120,000 | $105,000 | $110,000 | +$15,000 | +$10,000 |
| 99th | $280,000 | $250,000 | $250,000 | +$30,000 | +$30,000 |
Vancouver’s income premium over national averages is modest—only 4% at the median. This is the core of Vancouver’s affordability problem: incomes barely exceed the national average while housing costs are 2-3x higher than most Canadian cities.
Cost of living in Vancouver
Vancouver’s cost of living, driven primarily by housing, is the highest in Canada and among the highest in North America.
Housing costs
| Housing Type | Average Price/Rent | Monthly Cost | Income Needed (30% rule) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Detached house | $1,950,000 | $10,500/month (mortgage) | $420,000 |
| Townhouse | $1,100,000 | $5,950/month | $238,000 |
| Condo (downtown) | $780,000 | $4,250/month | $170,000 |
| Condo (suburban) | $620,000 | $3,400/month | $136,000 |
| Rent: Studio/Bachelor | - | $2,100/month | $84,000 |
| Rent: 1-bedroom | - | $2,500/month | $100,000 |
| Rent: 2-bedroom | - | $3,300/month | $132,000 |
| Rent: 3-bedroom | - | $4,200/month | $168,000 |
Mortgage calculations assume 20% down payment, 5.5% interest rate, 25-year amortization, plus property taxes and strata fees.
Price-to-income ratios
| Metric | Vancouver | Toronto | Montreal | Calgary | National |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Avg home price / Median household income | 15.8x | 13.8x | 8.5x | 6.1x | 7.2x |
| Median condo / Median household income | 9.9x | 9.0x | 5.5x | 4.0x | 5.0x |
Vancouver’s price-to-income ratio of 15.8x is the worst in Canada and ranks among the most unaffordable in the world, comparable to Hong Kong and Sydney. Even condos require nearly 10 years of gross household income.
Other living costs
| Category | Vancouver | National Average | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Groceries | 108 (index) | 100 | +8% |
| Transportation | 112 | 100 | +12% |
| Healthcare | 100 | 100 | 0% |
| Utilities | 95 | 100 | -5% |
| Overall (ex-housing) | 106 | 100 | +6% |
Non-housing costs in Vancouver are moderately higher than average, though mild weather keeps heating costs low.
Income inequality in Vancouver
Vancouver exhibits significant income inequality that manifests in stark geographic divides.
Gini coefficient: Vancouver’s Gini coefficient is approximately 0.44, slightly below Toronto but above the national average of 0.42.
Neighbourhood income disparities
| Neighbourhood | Median Household Income | Poverty Rate | Character |
|---|---|---|---|
| British Properties (West Van) | $350,000+ | <3% | Ultra-wealthy enclave |
| Shaughnessy | $180,000 | 5% | Old money, mansions |
| Point Grey | $125,000 | 8% | UBC-adjacent, professors/professionals |
| Yaletown | $85,000 | 12% | Young professionals, condos |
| Chinatown/DTES | $22,000 | 55% | Severe poverty, homelessness |
| Strathcona | $38,000 | 35% | Gentrifying, mixed |
| East Hastings | $28,000 | 48% | Canada’s poorest postal code |
| Kerrisdale | $95,000 | 10% | Upper-middle-class families |
The Downtown Eastside (DTES) remains Canada’s most concentrated area of poverty, while just kilometres away, Shaughnessy and British Properties house some of the country’s wealthiest residents. This extreme proximity of wealth and poverty is a defining characteristic of Vancouver.
Future economic outlook for Vancouver
Growth industries:
- Technology: Continued expansion, especially in AI, gaming, and enterprise software
- Clean technology: BC’s resources and hydroelectric power support green tech
- Life sciences: Growing biotech sector leveraging UBC research
- Film production: Stable with ongoing US production demand
Challenges:
- Housing costs driving talent away, especially young workers
- Competition from other tech hubs (Toronto, Austin, etc.) with better affordability
- Limited supply of commercial/industrial land for expansion
- Climate risks (flooding, wildfires) affecting insurance and development
Population projection: Metro Vancouver expected to reach 3.3 million by 2041, adding infrastructure and housing pressure.
Income outlook: Vancouver incomes projected to grow 2-3% annually, continuing to lag housing costs. The city may increasingly bifurcate between high earners who can afford ownership (often with family help) and renters with limited wealth accumulation potential.
Improving your income in Vancouver
High-demand occupations
| Occupation | Median Salary | Growth Outlook | Entry Path |
|---|---|---|---|
| Software developer | $92,000 | Strong | CS degree, bootcamp |
| DevOps engineer | $105,000 | Strong | IT experience, certifications |
| Visual effects artist | $70,000 | Moderate | Art/design training, portfolio |
| Registered nurse | $80,000 | Strong | Nursing degree |
| Electrician | $72,000 | Strong | Apprenticeship |
| Project manager | $82,000 | Moderate | PMP certification |
| Data analyst | $68,000 | Strong | Stats/business degree |
| Physician/specialist | $250,000+ | Stable | MD + residency |
Education institutions
- University of British Columbia (UBC): Top Canadian university; strong computer science, engineering, Sauder business school
- Simon Fraser University (SFU): Strong co-op programs, business, tech
- British Columbia Institute of Technology (BCIT): Applied tech, trades, engineering technology
- Emily Carr University: Design, digital media, visual arts
- Langara College: Transfer programs, applied studies
- Vancouver Film School: Film, animation, game design
Career strategies for Vancouver
- Target tech: Highest income potential; significant employer demand
- Consider trades: Electricians, plumbers, and construction trades earn well given housing demand
- Remote work advantage: Work for Toronto/US companies while living in Vancouver (or cheaper Fraser Valley)
- Film industry: Highly competitive but can be lucrative; requires networking and portfolio
- Accept long commute: Surrey and Langley offer better affordability; SkyTrain expansion helps
Lifestyle factors and income decisions
Vancouver uniquely attracts residents who accept lower real incomes for lifestyle benefits:
Climate premium: Vancouver’s mild winters and outdoor recreation access lead many workers to accept 10-20% lower salaries than they could earn elsewhere. This is particularly pronounced among workers relocating from colder provinces or the US.
Brain drain and retention:
- Senior tech workers often relocate to US for significantly higher compensation
- Healthcare professionals frequently move to Alberta for higher salaries and lower taxes
- Some professions (teachers, nurses, social workers) cannot afford to live where they work
Quality of life trade-offs:
| Factor | Vancouver Advantage | Vancouver Disadvantage |
|---|---|---|
| Climate | Mildest in Canada | Rain, wildfire smoke |
| Outdoors | Mountains, ocean | Crowds on trails |
| Housing | Quality stock | Extremely expensive |
| Income | Decent wages | Poor income-to-housing ratio |
| Transit | Good SkyTrain | Still car-dependent suburbs |
Living on different income levels in Vancouver
| Income Level | Lifestyle | Housing | Savings Potential |
|---|---|---|---|
| $42,000 (median) | Struggling | Shared basement suite | None |
| $60,000 | Basic, careful budget | Small rental | Minimal |
| $80,000 | Modest but manageable | 1-bedroom apartment | Limited |
| $100,000 | Comfortable renting | Nice 1-bed apartment | Moderate |
| $150,000 | Good quality of life | Condo ownership possible | Good |
| $200,000+ | Upper-middle | Townhouse ownership | Strong |
Vancouver’s median earner faces Canada’s most challenging affordability situation—a $42,000 income provides a lower standard of living than the same income would in virtually any other Canadian city.