Complete breakdown of monthly expenses, salaries by profession, Canadian tax system, healthcare, and PPP calculator. For newcomers and expats planning to move to Canada.
For a couple (2 adults). All amounts in CAD. Based on Statistics Canada, real 2026 data, and newcomer reports.
| Category | Item | Low (CAD) | High (CAD) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Housing | ||||
| Rent 1-bedroom apartment | 1,400 | 2,200 | Toronto/Vancouver much higher; Calgary/Winnipeg lower | |
| Utilities (hydro/heat/water) | 150 | 250 | Hydro = electricity in Ontario; heating costs vary by province | |
| Internet | 70 | 100 | Rogers, Bell, Telus; smaller ISPs like TekSavvy can be cheaper | |
| Mobile phones (2 SIMs) | 100 | 160 | Big 3 (Rogers, Bell, Telus) or budget brands (Fido, Koodo, Virgin) | |
| Tenant insurance | 30 | 50 | Highly recommended; often required by landlords | |
| Housing subtotal | 1,750 | 2,760 | ||
| Food & Groceries | ||||
| Groceries (2 adults) | 600 | 900 | No Frills, FreshCo for budget; Loblaws, Sobeys mid-range; Costco for bulk | |
| Food subtotal | 600 | 900 | ||
| Transport | ||||
| Monthly transit pass | 100 | 160 | TTC $156, TransLink $104-177, STM $94; varies by city/zone | |
| Car insurance (if applicable) | 150 | 250 | Mandatory; BC/Ontario most expensive provinces | |
| Transport subtotal | 100 | 410 | Transit only at low end; car at high end | |
| Healthcare | ||||
| Provincial health coverage | 0 | 0 | OHIP (ON), MSP (BC), RAMQ (QC) -- free for residents/PRs | |
| Dental/vision insurance | 100 | 200 | If not covered by employer; dental NOT covered by provincial plans | |
| Prescriptions | 50 | 100 | Varies by drug plan; some provinces have pharmacare programs | |
| Health subtotal | 150 | 300 | ||
| Personal & Lifestyle | ||||
| Clothes | 100 | 200 | Winter gear essential; Canadian Tire, Winners, Walmart | |
| Personal care | 80 | 120 | Haircuts, toiletries, cosmetics | |
| Sport & gym | 60 | 100 | GoodLife Fitness, YMCA, community centres | |
| Household supplies | 50 | 80 | Cleaning products, small items | |
| Entertainment & streaming | 50 | 100 | Netflix, Spotify, dining out occasionally | |
| Personal subtotal | 340 | 600 | ||
| Other | ||||
| Phone plans (included above) | -- | -- | Included in Housing section | |
| RRSP contributions (optional) | 0 | 500 | Tax-deductible retirement savings; highly recommended | |
| Other subtotal | 0 | 500 | ||
| TOTAL MONTHLY EXPENSES | ~2,940 | ~5,470 | Realistic range: 3,200 - 5,400 with buffer | |
Monthly gross salaries in CAD. Data from Statistics Canada, Glassdoor, Indeed 2026.
Canada uses a progressive federal + provincial income tax plus mandatory CPP and EI contributions. Updated for 2026 tax year.
| Annual Taxable Income (CAD) | Tax Rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 0 - 57,375 | 15% | Basic personal amount ~$15,705 is tax-free |
| 57,375 - 114,750 | 20.5% | Second bracket |
| 114,750 - 158,468 | 26% | Third bracket |
| 158,468 - 220,000 | 29% | Fourth bracket |
| 220,000+ | 33% | Highest federal bracket |
| Annual Taxable Income (CAD) | Tax Rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 0 - 51,446 | 5.05% | First bracket |
| 51,446 - 102,894 | 9.15% | Second bracket |
| 102,894 - 150,000 | 11.16% | Third bracket |
| 150,000 - 220,000 | 12.16% | Fourth bracket |
| 220,000+ | 13.16% | Highest Ontario bracket |
| Contribution | Employee Rate | Max Annual (Employee) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Canada Pension Plan (CPP) | 5.95% | ~3,867 | On earnings between $3,500 and $68,500; employer matches |
| Employment Insurance (EI) | 1.63% | ~1,049 | On insurable earnings up to ~$64,350; employer pays 1.4x |
| Monthly Gross | Annual Gross | Tax + CPP + EI | Net Monthly | Effective Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3,333 | 40,000 | ~770 | ~2,563 | 23.1% |
| 4,167 | 50,000 | ~1,030 | ~3,137 | 24.7% |
| 5,833 | 70,000 | ~1,580 | ~4,253 | 27.1% |
| 8,333 | 100,000 | ~2,570 | ~5,763 | 30.8% |
| 12,500 | 150,000 | ~4,250 | ~8,250 | 34.0% |
Compare how far your Canadian salary goes in other countries. Based on World Bank/OECD 2025-2026 PPP indices. Canada = 100.
| Country | Currency | PPP Index | Region | 4,000 CAD buys equiv. of |
|---|
Comparing major Canadian cities. Toronto = most expensive baseline. Data: Statistics Canada, Numbeo, Rentals.ca 2026.
| City | Avg Rent 1-bed (CAD) | Monthly Transit (CAD) | Meal Out (CAD) | Beer (CAD) | Livability Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Toronto | 2,200-2,800 | 156 | 20-35 | 8.00 | Most expensive; diverse; financial capital |
| Vancouver | 2,100-2,700 | 104-177 | 20-35 | 8.00 | Mild winters; mountains & ocean; very expensive housing |
| Montreal | 1,400-1,900 | 94 | 18-28 | 7.00 | Affordable; French-speaking; vibrant culture; great food |
| Calgary | 1,500-2,000 | 112 | 18-30 | 7.50 | No provincial sales tax; energy sector; Stampede |
| Ottawa | 1,600-2,100 | 125 | 18-30 | 7.50 | National capital; federal jobs; bilingual; Rideau Canal |
| Edmonton | 1,300-1,700 | 100 | 16-25 | 7.00 | More affordable Alberta option; cold winters; festivals |
| Winnipeg | 1,100-1,500 | 106 | 15-22 | 6.50 | Very affordable; harsh winters; cultural diversity |
| Halifax | 1,500-2,000 | 82 | 16-25 | 7.00 | East coast charm; growing tech hub; ocean lifestyle |
| Victoria | 1,800-2,300 | 95 | 18-30 | 7.50 | Mildest climate in Canada; expensive for size; retiree favourite |
| Quebec City | 1,000-1,400 | 93 | 15-22 | 6.50 | Very affordable; French required; historic; great quality of life |
Canada has a publicly funded healthcare system (Medicare) administered by each province. Medically necessary services are free at point of use.
| Province | Plan Name | Monthly Premium | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ontario | OHIP | Free | Ontario Health Insurance Plan; 3-month waiting period for newcomers |
| British Columbia | MSP | Free | Medical Services Plan; premiums eliminated in 2020 |
| Quebec | RAMQ | Free | Regie de l'assurance maladie du Quebec; prescription drug plan mandatory |
| Alberta | AHCIP | Free | Alberta Health Care Insurance Plan |
| Service | Covered? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| GP / family doctor visits | Yes | Free; finding a family doctor can be difficult in many areas |
| Specialist visits | Yes | Referral from GP required; wait times can be long (weeks to months) |
| Emergency room | Yes | Free; long wait times for non-urgent cases (4-8+ hours common) |
| Hospital stays & surgery | Yes | Fully covered; elective surgery wait times can be months |
| Walk-in clinics | Yes | No appointment needed; good alternative when no family doctor |
| Dental care | No | Canadian Dental Care Plan (CDCP) covers low-income; otherwise private insurance |
| Vision care | No | Eye exams for children/seniors covered in some provinces |
| Prescription drugs | Partial | Varies by province; Quebec has mandatory drug insurance; Ontario covers 25 and under |
| Mental health | Partial | Psychiatrists covered; psychologists/counsellors usually NOT (need private insurance) |
| Ambulance | Partial | Co-pay of $45-$240+ depending on province |
The Canadian rental and housing market varies dramatically by region. Understanding provincial rules is essential.
| Term | Explanation |
|---|---|
| First & last month's rent | Ontario requires first + last month's rent upfront as deposit. Other provinces vary (BC max half month; Alberta: security deposit = 1 month max) |
| Credit check | Landlords will run credit checks; newcomers with no Canadian credit history can offer extra references or larger deposit |
| References | Employment letter, previous landlord references, and sometimes bank statements are requested |
| Rent control | Varies by province. Ontario: rent increase capped (~2.5%/year for units built before Nov 2018). BC: capped. Alberta/Saskatchewan: no rent control |
| Condo fees | If buying a condo: monthly maintenance fees ($300-$800+) cover building upkeep, amenities, sometimes utilities |
| CMHC mortgage insurance | Required if down payment is less than 20% when buying; adds 2.8-4% of mortgage to cost |
| Lease terms | Standard 1-year lease, then month-to-month. Breaking a lease early may require penalty or finding a replacement tenant |
| Platform | Type | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Realtor.ca | Buying & renting | Official MLS listings; largest property database in Canada |
| Kijiji.ca | Rentals | Classifieds site; very popular for rentals, especially in Ontario |
| Rentals.ca / Liv.rent | Rentals | Dedicated rental platforms with verified listings |
| Facebook Marketplace | All types | Popular for room rentals and sublets; beware of scams |
| PadMapper / Zumper | Rentals | Aggregates listings from multiple sources; good filters |
| Craigslist (Vancouver) | Rentals | Still widely used in Vancouver for rental listings |
Canada is vast. Cities have transit systems but many areas are car-dependent. Understanding transport options is essential.
| Transport Type | Cost | Details |
|---|---|---|
| TTC (Toronto) | $156/month | Presto card; subway, buses, streetcars; Canada's largest transit system |
| TransLink (Vancouver) | $104-177/month | Compass card; SkyTrain, buses, SeaBus; zone-based pricing |
| STM (Montreal) | $94/month | OPUS card; metro, buses; affordable and extensive |
| OC Transpo (Ottawa) | $125/month | Presto card; O-Train LRT + buses |
| GO Transit (GTA) | $200-400/month | Regional trains/buses for Greater Toronto commuters; Presto card |
| VIA Rail | $50-300+ per trip | Inter-city train; Toronto-Montreal ~$50-150; book early for best fares |
| Car insurance | $150-400/month | Mandatory; BC (ICBC), Ontario (private), Quebec (SAAQ + private), Alberta (private) |
| Winter tires | $400-800 set | Mandatory in Quebec (Dec 1-Mar 15); strongly recommended everywhere else |
| Ride-sharing | Varies | Uber, Lyft available in most major cities |
Canadian employment standards, benefits, and workplace culture for newcomers.
| Topic | Details | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Employment Standards | Each province has its own Employment Standards Act | Federal standards apply to banks, telecoms, airlines, etc. |
| Vacation | Minimum 2 weeks (10 days) after 1 year | Increases to 3 weeks after 5 years in most provinces; 4% vacation pay |
| Statutory holidays | Federal: 9 days (New Year's, Good Friday, Canada Day, Labour Day, etc.) | Provinces add more (e.g., Family Day, Civic Holiday); varies by province |
| Parental leave | Standard: 12 months (55% EI rate) or Extended: 18 months (33% EI rate) | Can be shared between parents; some employers top up to full salary |
| EI benefits | Employment Insurance: 55% of earnings up to max $668/week | Available if laid off (not quit); typically 14-45 weeks depending on hours/region |
| RRSP | Registered Retirement Savings Plan; tax-deductible contributions | Contribution limit: 18% of earned income (max ~$31,560); reduces taxable income |
| TFSA | Tax-Free Savings Account; investment gains are tax-free | Annual contribution limit ~$7,000 (2026); cumulative room since 18 or 2009 |
| Probation period | Typically 3 months; can be up to 6 months | Employer can terminate with minimal notice during probation |
| Bilingual advantage | English + French is a major asset for federal government jobs | Many federal positions require bilingualism; premium pay in some roles |
| Sick leave | Varies by province; federal: 10 paid sick days | Some provinces still have unpaid sick leave only; employer policies vary |
Important acronyms, cultural norms, and things every newcomer to Canada should know.
| Term | Full Name | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| SIN | Social Insurance Number | 9-digit number required for working, taxes, and government benefits; apply at Service Canada |
| PR | Permanent Resident | Status allowing you to live/work in Canada permanently; pathway to citizenship after 3 years |
| IRCC | Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada | Federal department handling immigration, visas, PR applications, citizenship |
| CRA | Canada Revenue Agency | Tax authority; file taxes annually by April 30; manages RRSP/TFSA/benefits |
| T4 | Statement of Remuneration Paid | Annual tax slip from employer showing income and deductions; needed to file taxes |
| RRSP | Registered Retirement Savings Plan | Tax-deductible retirement savings; withdrawals are taxed |
| TFSA | Tax-Free Savings Account | Investment account; gains and withdrawals are completely tax-free |
| EI | Employment Insurance | Benefits for job loss, parental leave, sickness; funded by payroll deductions |
| CPP | Canada Pension Plan | Mandatory retirement pension; contributions from age 18 to 65+ |
| OHIP / MSP | Provincial Health Insurance | OHIP (Ontario), MSP (BC), RAMQ (Quebec), AHCIP (Alberta); covers doctor visits & hospital |
| Topic | Details |
|---|---|
| Tipping culture | 15-20% at restaurants, bars, hairdressers. 10-15% for takeout/delivery. Tips are expected, not optional. Servers rely on tips as base pay is often lower. |
| Metric system | Canada officially uses metric (km, kg, Celsius) but many people use imperial for height/weight (feet/pounds). Ovens often in Fahrenheit. |
| Bilingual country | English and French are both official languages. Quebec is primarily French. New Brunswick is officially bilingual. Federal services available in both languages. |
| Weather extremes | Winters can reach -30C to -40C in prairies. Summers can hit 35C+. Layer clothing. Invest in a good winter coat, boots, and gloves. |
| Tim Hortons | Iconic Canadian coffee chain. "Double-double" = coffee with two cream, two sugar. Cultural institution more than just coffee. |
| Saying sorry | Canadians apologize frequently -- even when it's not their fault. "Sorry" is a reflex, not always a genuine apology. Ontario even has an Apology Act (2009). |
| Shoes off indoors | Always remove shoes when entering someone's home. This is a strong cultural norm across Canada. |
| Sales tax not in price | Displayed prices do NOT include sales tax. Add GST/HST/PST (5-15%) to the sticker price at checkout. |
What gross salary do you need? Here's the realistic breakdown for 2026.
| Lifestyle | Monthly Expenses (CAD) | Gross Salary Needed (CAD) | Net After Tax | Buffer |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Survival mode Room rental, very frugal | 1,800 | 2,800 | 2,100 | +300 |
| Basic single Own apartment outside big city | 2,500 | 3,800 | 2,900 | +400 |
| Couple (mid-size city) 2 adults, comfortable | 3,800 | 5,800 | 4,200 | +400 |
| Couple (Toronto/Vancouver) 2 adults, good lifestyle | 5,400 | 8,500 | 5,900 | +500 |
| Family with child 2 adults + 1 child, big city | 6,200 | 10,000 | 6,700 | +500 |
| City Tier | Examples | Min Gross (Couple) | Recommended Gross |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tier 1 (Most Expensive) | Toronto, Vancouver | $85,000 | $110,000+ |
| Tier 2 (Expensive) | Ottawa, Victoria, Calgary | $70,000 | $90,000+ |
| Tier 3 (Moderate) | Montreal, Halifax, Edmonton | $60,000 | $75,000+ |
| Tier 4 (Affordable) | Winnipeg, Quebec City, Saskatoon | $50,000 | $65,000+ |