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Here’s what a comfortable income looks like in Canada

Home / Finance / Here’s what a comfortable income looks like in Canada
Here’s what a comfortable income looks like in Canada
  • September 2, 2025
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Here’s what a comfortable income looks like in Canada

How much household income do you need to be comfortable in Canada? In June, we posed this question to more than 9,000 Canadians in a web poll in partnership with LEO, the market research panel of Leger Marketing.

Of the five income options given, $100,000 was the most popular answer, chosen by 37% of respondents. The next biggest group (25.8%) aimed higher, selecting $150,000. Slightly fewer, 23.8%, opted for the median Canadian salary of $74,200. Smaller cohorts chose $200,000 (8.5%) and $250,000 (4.9%), which is very close to the top federal tax bracket.

There isn’t a clear consensus around how much money it takes to live comfortably in Canada. Your own answer will likely depend on your age—younger and older respondents tended to choose lower sums, and people in their prime working and child-rearing years chose higher ones—as well as the size of your household, the city you live in, whether you own your home outright, and any number of other variables.

What we know about Canadian incomes

The average Canadian household had a disposable income of $100,702 in 2024, according to Statistics Canada. Households in the top (fourth and fifth) income quintiles averaged $115,656 and $212,741, respectively.

To crack the top 10% of income earners in Canada as an individual, you must earn at least $125,945. For the top 25%, the threshold is $81,184. People who earn between $57,375 and $114,750 are considered middle-class. Note these are individual earnings; household earnings would be higher, on average. 

Just as there are varying ideas of what constitutes comfort, so are there measures of its opposite: poverty. Living Wage Canada is a non-profit that measures what it considers a sufficient hourly wage to cover essential living expenses in communities across Canada. It pegs a living wage in Calgary at $24.45, and in Vancouver, $27.05. In the Greater Toronto Area, it’s $26. That works out to $48,672 a year based on a 36-hour work week.

Likewise, Statistics Canada measures the cost of living in different locations to find the point at which the low-income cut-off (LICO) applies for federal tax rates and benefits. The highest costs for raising a family of four are all in the far north, peaking at $125,784 in Iqaluit, Nunavut. South of the 60th parallel, the poverty line for families is highest in Vancouver, at $59,508.

The economics teams of major banks try to get a little more sophisticated about what constitutes “affordability” in the housing market. They examine the share of average incomes required to cover average home ownership costs in various cities. But even this makes certain assumptions, such as the rule that average shelter costs should not exceed 30% of gross household income. Focused as the banks are on the mortgage market, they don’t take in a range of other contributors to the cost of living.

How MoneySense calculates a comfortable income

In an attempt to get a more scientific measure of what it means to be comfortable in various parts of Canada, we turned to a cost-of-living tool developed by the job site CareerBeacon. Below, you’ll find a list of Canadian cities with populations of 50,000 or more and the monthly cost for the average single person renting their home to live there, including rent, transportation, food, utilities, clothing, leisure, and other expenditures.

We then considered the additional needs for income taxes (including Employment Insurance and Canada Pension Plan contributions), which typically net out to between 20% and 25% of gross income for middle-income earners, and savings at 10% to 15%. We then rounded up a further 10% to 20% as a “margin of comfort” allowing for unplanned expenditures or additional savings. 

Using this as a guide, we took a comfortable living in each community to be approximately double the calculated average cost of living. The pie chart below gives a rough diagram of the assumptions that go into this methodology.

While the cost-of-living numbers from CareerBeacon are based on single earners renting their homes, in most cases they can be extrapolated to similarly comfortable living standards for two-income households and home owners. For example, a home-owning family of four with two parents in the workforce would likely need to clear $200,000 to feel comfortable in Vancouver or Whitby, Ont., but could get by very comfortably on just $115,000 in Trois-Rivières, Que.

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Comfortable income levels in Canadian cities

In the table below, the communities are listed alphabetically to make it easy for you to find the comfortable income for your community, or one close to you. Only municipalities with 50,000 or more residents are included in CareerBeacon’s survey.

City Avg. monthly cost of living Annual income required to be comfortable (single person)
Abbotsford, British Columbia $3,522 $84,528
Airdrie, Alberta $3,811 $91,464
Ajax, Ontario $3,605 $86,520
Aurora, Ontario $3,521 $84,504
Barrie, Ontario $3,807 $91,368
Belleville, Ontario $3,724 $89,376
Brampton, Ontario $3,471 $83,304
Brantford, Ontario $3,336 $80,064
Brossard, Quebec $3,824 $91,776
Burlington, Ontario $4,001 $96,024
Burnaby, British Columbia $4,263 $102,312
Calgary, Alberta $3,666 $87,984
Cambridge, Ontario $3,747 $89,928
Chilliwack, British Columbia $3,402 $81,648
Coquitlam, British Columbia $4,372 $104,928
Drummondville, Quebec $3,383 $81,192
Edmonton, Alberta $3,295 $79,080
Fredericton, New Brunswick $2,991 $71,784
Gatineau, Quebec $3,225 $77,400
Granby, Quebec $3,469 $83,256
Grande Prairie, Alberta $3,525 $84,600
Greater Sudbury, Ontario $3,395 $81,480
Guelph, Ontario $3,818 $91,632
Halifax, Nova Scotia $3,696 $88,704
Hamilton, Ontario $3,681 $88,344
Kamloops, British Columbia $3,802 $91,248
Kelowna, British Columbia $3,685 $88,440
Kingston, Ontario $3,437 $82,488
Kitchener, Ontario $3,787 $90,888
Laval, Quebec $3,416 $81,984
Lethbridge, Alberta $3,067 $73,608
London, Ontario $3,618 $86,832
Longueuil, Quebec $3,298 $79,152
Markham, Ontario $4,084 $98,016
Medicine Hat, Alberta $2,934 $70,416
Milton, Ontario $4,433 $106,392
Mississauga, Ontario $4,159 $99,816
Moncton, New Brunswick $3,058 $73,392
Montreal, Quebec $3,276 $78,624
Nanaimo, British Columbia $3,557 $85,368
New Westminster, British Columbia $3,941 $94,584
Newmarket, Ontario $3,426 $82,224
Niagara Falls, Ontario $3,451 $82,824
North Bay, Ontario $3,621 $86,904
North Vancouver, British Columbia $4,313 $103,512
Oakville, Ontario $3,814 $91,536
Oshawa, Ontario $3,719 $89,256
Ottawa, Ontario $3,713 $89,112
Peterborough, Ontario $3,531 $84,744
Pickering, Ontario $3,624 $86,976
Port Coquitlam, British Columbia $3,627 $87,048
Prince George, British Columbia $3,361 $80,664
Québec City, Quebec $3,034 $72,816
Red Deer, Alberta $3,266 $78,384
Regina, Saskatchewan $3,141 $75,384
Richmond Hill, Ontario $4,439 $106,536
Richmond, British Columbia $3,835 $92,040

Michael McCulloughSource

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