Skip to main content

Calgary vs. Toronto: Where to Live in 2026 — Cost, Housing, Jobs & Lifestyle Compared

Updated

The Toronto-to-Calgary migration has been one of Canada’s defining demographic trends since 2020. Driven almost entirely by housing affordability, tens of thousands of families have made the move west — trading Bay Street proximity for mountain views and mortgage payments they can actually afford. Here is the full comparison.

Housing Market Snapshot (2026)

MetricCalgaryToronto
Average home price (all types)$550,000–$600,000$1,050,000–$1,100,000
Average detached house$650,000–$750,000$1,450,000–$1,550,000
Average condo$300,000–$370,000$650,000–$700,000
Average townhouse$400,000–$480,000$850,000–$950,000
Price per square foot (condo)$350–$450$850–$1,100
Year-over-year price change+5–8%+1–3%
Months of inventory2–3 months2–4 months
Average days on market20–3020–35

Mortgage Affordability Comparison

MetricCalgary ($575,000 home)Toronto ($1,100,000 home)
Minimum down payment$28,750 (5%)$85,000 (5% on first $500K + 10% on $600K)
CMHC insurance$21,850 (4.0%)$40,600 (4.0%)
Mortgage amount$568,100$1,055,600
Monthly payment (5.2%, 25-yr)~$3,375~$6,275
Household income needed (stress test)~$100,000~$190,000
Property tax (annual)~$3,800–$4,500~$6,000–$8,000
Land transfer tax$0~$34,950 (Ontario LTT + Toronto municipal LTT)
Total closing costs~$5,000–$8,000~$45,000–$55,000

Key takeaway: The same household income that leaves you house-poor in Toronto buys a comfortable family home in Calgary — with $30,000+ less cash needed upfront.

What a $600,000 Budget Buys You

Property TypeCalgaryToronto
Detached house3–4 bed, 2-car garage, backyard, 1,800–2,400 sq ft, newer communityNot available at this price
Townhouse3-bed, attached garage, 1,400–1,800 sq ftSmall 2-bed in outer suburbs (Scarborough, Etobicoke)
Condo2-bed, 900–1,200 sq ft, downtown or beltline1-bed, 550–650 sq ft, downtown or midtown

Tax Comparison

TaxCalgary (Alberta)Toronto (Ontario)
Provincial income tax (top rate)15% (above $355K)13.16% (above $220K)
Combined income tax ($100K, effective)~28%~28%
Provincial sales tax0% (no PST)8% HST provincial portion
Land transfer taxNoneOntario LTT + Toronto municipal LTT
Property tax rate~0.65–0.75% of assessed value~0.60–0.70% of assessed value
Overall tax advantageLower total tax burden at most income levels due to no PSTSlightly lower income tax on moderate incomes; much higher transaction taxes

No PST savings: On $50,000/year in taxable purchases, a Calgary family saves ~$4,000 annually vs. Toronto’s 8% HST provincial portion. Over a decade, that’s $40,000.

Cost of Living Beyond Housing

CategoryCalgaryTorontoWinner
Groceries$350–$450/month (couple)$375–$475/month (couple)Roughly equal
Dining outModerateHigher prices especially downtownCalgary
Public transit (monthly)$112 (Calgary Transit)$156 (TTC)Calgary
Gas (per litre)$1.40–$1.55$1.55–$1.75Calgary
Auto insurance$1,500–$2,200/year$2,000–$3,000/yearCalgary
Home insurance$1,200–$1,800/year$1,200–$1,800/yearRoughly equal
Utilities$200–$300/month$200–$350/monthCalgary slightly
Daycare$1,000–$1,500/month$1,500–$2,500/monthCalgary

Job Market

SectorCalgaryToronto
Energy (oil & gas)Dominant — HQs, engineering, services, clean energy transitionMinor — some trading desks
Finance & bankingModerate — energy finance, investment firmsDominant — Bay Street, all Big 5 bank HQs, insurance, asset management
TechnologyGrowing rapidly — fintech, AI, cleantechVery strong — Shopify, Google, Amazon, Microsoft, startup ecosystem
Film & mediaGrowing — $1B+ production spendingVery strong — media HQs, TIFF, advertising, digital media
Professional servicesStrong — engineering, accounting, legal (energy-focused)Very strong — Big 4, law firms, consulting, all sectors
Construction & real estateStrong — residential and infrastructure growthStrong — Canada’s largest development market
HealthcareStrong — Alberta Health Services, researchStrong — UHN, SickKids, research hospitals
Average household income~$100,000–$115,000~$95,000–$110,000
Unemployment rate6.0–7.0%6.0–7.0%

Neighbourhoods for Homebuyers

Calgary — Best Neighbourhoods by Buyer Type

NeighbourhoodAvg. Price RangeBest For
Beltline$250,000–$450,000 (condos)Young professionals, downtown walkability
Bridgeland$400,000–$650,000Walkable community, river paths, cafes
Altadore / Marda Loop$550,000–$900,000Young families, trendy area
Tuscany / Panorama Hills$450,000–$650,000Suburban families, newer builds
Mahogany / Auburn Bay$400,000–$600,000Families, lake communities
Aspen Woods$700,000–$1,200,000Established families, west Calgary
Cranston / McKenzie Towne$400,000–$600,000Family communities, South Calgary
Airdrie$350,000–$500,000Maximum affordability, 20 min north
Cochrane$400,000–$550,000Mountain views, small-town feel
Kensington$350,000–$600,000Culture, walkability, near downtown

Toronto — Best Neighbourhoods by Buyer Type

NeighbourhoodAvg. Price RangeBest For
The Annex$1,200,000–$2,500,000+Established professionals
Leslieville$900,000–$1,300,000Young families, community feel
Junction / High Park$900,000–$1,400,000Families, parks, village feel
Scarborough$750,000–$1,000,000Affordable (for Toronto), diverse
Etobicoke$700,000–$1,100,000Suburban families, waterfront areas
North York$800,000–$1,200,000Families, Yonge corridor
Liberty Village (condos)$500,000–$700,000Young professionals
Mississauga$700,000–$1,000,000GTA suburban families
Hamilton (GO commuter)$600,000–$800,000First-time buyers, more space
Oshawa / Whitby$600,000–$850,000Affordable east GTA, GO Transit

Lifestyle Comparison

FactorCalgaryToronto
Outdoor accessRocky Mountains 1 hour; Banff, Canmore, KananaskisMuskoka/cottage country 2–3 hours; Scarborough Bluffs, waterfront trail
WinterCold (avg. January: -8°C) but SUNNY — 333 days of sun/year; chinook warm spellsCold (avg. January: -5°C), grey, windy near lake
SummerWarm, dry, long days; StampedeHot, humid; extensive festival season (TIFF, Caribana, etc.)
Cultural sceneStampede, National Music Centre, Glenbow; growing arts sceneWorld-class — TIFF, ROM, AGO, Mirvish theatre, extremely diverse cultural scene
Food sceneGood and improving; steakhouses, craft beer, growing diversityExceptional — global cuisines, street food, Michelin-recognized, massive diversity
NightlifeModerate — concentrated downtown/17th Ave areaExtensive — King West, Queen West, Entertainment District, diverse options
SportsFlames (NHL), Stampeders (CFL), Roughnecks (NLL), new arena comingMaple Leafs, Raptors, Blue Jays, TFC, Argos — all major leagues
WalkabilityCar-dependent; improving with LRT expansionWalkable downtown; car-dependent suburbs
TransitCalgary Transit (C-Train LRT + bus); Green Line under constructionTTC (subway, bus, streetcar); GO Transit regional; better but more expensive
DiversityGrowing — Filipino, South Asian, Chinese, African communitiesOne of the most diverse cities globally — 200+ ethnic groups

Family Considerations

FactorCalgaryTorontoWinner
Family home (3-bed)$450,000–$750,000$900,000–$1,400,000Calgary
Backyard / garage standardYes (most family homes)Rare unless $1M+Calgary
School qualityStrong public and Catholic systemStrong; varies by neighbourhoodRoughly equal
Daycare cost$1,000–$1,500/month$1,500–$2,500/monthCalgary
University proximityU of C, Mount Royal, SAITU of T, York, TMU, many collegesToronto (more options)
Commute time25–35 min average35–50 min averageCalgary
Child safety / crimeLow suburban crime; safe communitiesLow overall; higher property crime downtownCalgary slightly

Real Estate Investment Potential

FactorCalgaryToronto
Cap rate (rental properties)4.5–6.0%2.5–3.5%
Rental vacancy rate1.5–3.0%1.5–3.0%
Average 1-bed rent$1,500–$1,800$2,200–$2,600
Average 2-bed rent$1,900–$2,300$2,800–$3,400
10-year appreciation (avg. annual)4–6%6–8%
Population growthVery strong (interprovincial + immigration)Strong (immigration-driven)
Investment entry point~$300K condo / ~$450K townhouse~$650K condo / ~$850K townhouse
Rent controlNone (Alberta)Buildings occupied before Nov 15, 2018 only

The Migration Math: Selling in Toronto → Buying in Calgary

ScenarioNumbers
Sell Toronto condo$680,000 (2-bed, 750 sq ft)
Remaining mortgage-$400,000
Selling costs (agent + legal)-$35,000
Net proceeds$245,000
Buy Calgary detached home$650,000 (4-bed, 2-car garage, 2,200 sq ft)
Down payment (20%)-$130,000
Land transfer tax$0
Closing costs-$5,000
Cash remaining~$110,000
Monthly mortgage payment (Calgary)~$3,100
Previous monthly payment (Toronto condo)~$2,400 + $600 condo fees = ~$3,000

Result: More space, a backyard, a garage, and $110,000 in savings — with roughly the same monthly payment. This is the math driving the migration.

Making the Decision

You might prefer Calgary if…You might prefer Toronto if…
Affordability and financial breathing room are your priorityYou value the largest, most diverse job market in Canada
You want a detached home with a yard and garageYour career is in finance, media, or advertising
You work in energy, engineering, or constructionYou thrive in a fast-paced, globally connected city
You love sunshine and outdoor access to the RockiesYou want world-class dining, arts, and sports (all major leagues)
You’re building a rental portfolio (higher cap rates, lower entry)You value ethnic diversity and a cosmopolitan social scene
You have young children (lower daycare costs, more space)You prefer to avoid cold winters (Toronto is milder)
You want no PST and no land transfer taxYou want extensive public transit and walkable downtown living

Impact on Your Mortgage

FactorCalgaryToronto
Income needed to qualify~$100,000~$190,000
Down payment$28,750 (5% on $575K)$85,000 (on $1.1M)
Land transfer tax$0~$34,950
First-time buyer incentivesFederal (HBP, FHSA); no LTT to rebateFederal + Ontario LTT rebate ($4,000) + Toronto municipal LTT rebate ($4,475)
Stress testEasier — lower purchase pricesHarder — debt ratios stretched
Total upfront cash needed~$35,000–$40,000~$130,000–$145,000
🏦

We use Wealthsimple for everyday banking. Get a $25 bonus when you open a free chequing account.

No monthly fees · 4% interest on deposits · Free e-Transfers · Takes 3 minutes

Get Your $25 Bonus →