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

Updated

Calgary and Vancouver represent two of Canada’s most contrasted major cities — one offers mountain access with ocean views and mild winters but extreme housing costs, the other delivers energy sector wealth, affordability, and sunshine but colder winters. For homebuyers deciding between the two, the financial gap is enormous.

Housing Market Snapshot (2026)

MetricCalgaryVancouver
Average home price (all types)$550,000–$600,000$1,150,000–$1,250,000
Average detached house$650,000–$750,000$1,900,000–$2,100,000
Average condo$300,000–$370,000$700,000–$800,000
Average townhouse$400,000–$480,000$950,000–$1,100,000
Price per square foot (condo)$350–$450$900–$1,200
Year-over-year price change+5–8%+1–4%
Months of inventory2–3 months3–5 months
Average days on market20–3025–40

Mortgage Affordability Comparison

MetricCalgary ($575,000 home)Vancouver ($1,200,000 home)
Minimum down payment$28,750 (5%)$95,000 (5% on $500K + 10% on $700K)
CMHC insurance$21,850 (4.0%)$44,200 (4.0%)
Mortgage amount$568,100$1,149,200
Monthly payment (5.2%, 25-yr)~$3,375~$6,830
Household income needed (stress test)~$100,000~$205,000
Property tax (annual)~$3,800–$4,500~$4,500–$6,000
Land transfer tax$0 (Alberta has no land transfer tax)~$20,000 (BC Property Transfer Tax)
Total closing costs~$5,000–$8,000~$30,000–$40,000

Key takeaway: Buying in Calgary requires roughly half the income, one-third the upfront cash, and zero land transfer tax compared to Vancouver.

Tax Comparison

TaxCalgary (Alberta)Vancouver (BC)
Provincial income tax (top rate)15% (flat above $355K)20.5% (above $252K)
Provincial income tax ($100K income, effective)~10%~8%
Combined income tax ($100K)~28% effective~28% effective
Provincial sales tax0% (no PST)7% PST (+ 5% GST = 12% total)
Land transfer taxNone1–3% (BC PTT) + 20% foreign buyer tax if applicable
Property tax rate~0.65–0.75% of assessed value~0.25–0.35% of assessed value
Annual property tax on $600K home~$4,000~$3,500 (lower rate but higher assessments offset)

No PST impact: A family spending $50,000/year on PST-eligible goods saves $3,500 annually in Alberta vs. BC. Combined with no land transfer tax, Calgary’s total tax burden for homebuyers is substantially lower.

Cost of Living Beyond Housing

CategoryCalgaryVancouverWinner
Groceries$350–$450/month (couple)$375–$475/month (couple)Roughly equal
Dining outModerateHigher pricesCalgary
Public transit (monthly pass)$112 (Calgary Transit)$104.90–$181.05 (TransLink, zone-dependent)Depends on zones
Gas (per litre)$1.40–$1.55$1.70–$1.95Calgary
Auto insurance$1,500–$2,200/year$1,800–$2,800/year (ICBC)Calgary
Home insurance$1,200–$1,800/year (hail risk)$1,000–$1,500/yearVancouver
Utilities$200–$300/month$150–$250/monthVancouver
Daycare$1,000–$1,500/month$1,000–$1,500/monthRoughly equal

Job Market

SectorCalgaryVancouver
Energy (oil & gas)Dominant — hundreds of HQs and service companies; highest-paying sectorMinor
TechnologyGrowing rapidly — fintech, cleantech, startup scene expandingVery strong — Amazon, Microsoft, SAP, Hootsuite, many startups
Film & VFXGrowing — $1B+ annual production spending (rising with tax credits)Very strong — “Hollywood North,” major studios, Netflix productions
FinanceModerate — investment firms, energy financeModerate — mining finance, Asia-Pacific trade finance
Construction & engineeringStrong — infrastructure, energy projectsStrong — real estate development, transit projects
Mining & resourcesStrong — many mining HQs alongside energyStrong — Vancouver is global mining finance capital
HealthcareStrong — Alberta Health Services is one of Canada’s largest employersStrong — BC’s health system, biotech
Logistics & transportationGrowing — CP Rail HQ, distribution hub for Western CanadaMajor — port city, Asia-Pacific trade gateway
Average household income~$100,000–$115,000~$85,000–$95,000
Unemployment rate6.0–7.0%5.0–6.0%

Calgary salary advantage: Higher average incomes + lower cost of living = significantly more purchasing power than Vancouver.

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 pathways, cafes
Altadore / Marda Loop$550,000–$900,000Young families, trendy shops and restaurants
Kensington$350,000–$600,000Culture, walkability, proximity to downtown
Tuscany / Panorama Hills$450,000–$650,000Suburban families, newer builds, good schools
Mahogany / Auburn Bay$400,000–$600,000Families, lake communities, new construction
Aspen Woods / Springbank Hill$700,000–$1,200,000Established families, larger lots, west Calgary
Airdrie (satellite city)$350,000–$500,000Maximum affordability, commuter access
Cochrane (satellite town)$400,000–$550,000Small-town feel, mountain views, 30 min to Calgary
Cranston / McKenzie Towne$400,000–$600,000Family-oriented, new communities, South Calgary

Vancouver — Best Neighbourhoods by Buyer Type

NeighbourhoodAvg. Price RangeBest For
Kitsilano$900,000–$1,500,000Young professionals, beach, walkability
Mount Pleasant$700,000–$1,200,000 (condos/townhomes)Creative types, breweries, Main Street culture
East Vancouver (Commercial Drive)$800,000–$1,300,000Diverse community, Italian roots, family-friendly
Burnaby (Metrotown)$550,000–$800,000 (condos)Transit-connected, affordable (for Metro Van), amenities
New Westminster$500,000–$750,000 (condos)Affordable, SkyTrain access, riverfront
Coquitlam / Port Coquitlam$600,000–$900,000Suburban families, Evergreen Line, nature access
Surrey (city centre)$500,000–$750,000Fastest-growing municipality, new SkyTrain extension, affordable
North Vancouver$900,000–$1,500,000Mountain access, SeaBus, outdoor lifestyle
Langley$600,000–$900,000Suburban families, horse country, larger lots
Squamish (commuter town)$700,000–$1,000,000Outdoor paradise, 45 min to Vancouver, fast-growing

Lifestyle Comparison

FactorCalgaryVancouver
MountainsRockies — 1 hour to Banff/Canmore, world-class skiingNorth Shore mountains — 30 minutes; Whistler — 90 minutes
Ocean accessNoneImmediate — beaches, sailing, kayaking, whale watching
Outdoor recreationSkiing (1 hr), hiking, mountain biking, camping, fishingSkiing (30 min–1.5 hr), hiking, cycling, kayaking, surfing (Tofino)
Sunshine333 days/year (sunniest major city in Canada)~160 sunny days/year; Nov–Mar is grey and rainy
WinterCold (avg. January: -8°C) but sunny; chinook warm spellsMild (avg. January: 3°C) but rainy; rare snow at sea level
SummerWarm, dry, long days (avg. July: 23°C)Warm, dry, spectacular (avg. July: 22°C)
Cultural sceneGrowing — National Music Centre, Stampede, festivalsMature — diverse food scene, festivals, arts community
Food sceneGood and improving — steakhouses, diverse cuisines, craft beerExceptional — sushi, Asian cuisine, farm-to-table, global food
WalkabilityCar-dependent (improving with Green Line LRT)More walkable (downtown, SkyTrain corridor)
Traffic / commuteModerate — 25–35 minutes averageWorse — 35–50 minutes average; bridges create bottlenecks

Family Considerations

FactorCalgaryVancouverWinner
Family home affordability (3-bed+)$450,000–$750,000$1,200,000–$2,000,000+Calgary
School qualityStrong public system; good Catholic school optionStrong public system; French immersion popularRoughly equal
Daycare$1,000–$1,500/month (federal $10/day expanding)$1,000–$1,500/month (federal $10/day expanding)Roughly equal
Space (lot size)Larger lots standard; backyards commonSmall lots in city; larger lots in suburbsCalgary
SafetyLow crime rate; safe suburbsLow crime rate; property crime higher downtownCalgary slightly
Activities for kidsHeritage Park, zoo, TELUS Spark, mountains, lake communitiesScience World, aquarium, beaches, Stanley Park, skiingBoth excellent

Real Estate Investment Potential

FactorCalgaryVancouver
Cap rate (rental properties)4.5–6.0%2.0–3.5%
Rental vacancy rate1.5–3.0%1.0–2.5%
Average 1-bed rent$1,500–$1,800$2,400–$2,800
Average 2-bed rent$1,900–$2,300$3,000–$3,600
10-year appreciation (avg. annual)4–6% (volatile, energy-linked)5–8% (strong long-term)
Population growthStrong — interprovincial migration from BC & OntarioModerate — international immigration strong; interprovincial out-migration
Investment entry barrierLower — $300K condo can be a first rental propertyVery high — $700K+ entry point even for condos
Rent controlNone (Alberta) — market rentsBC cooling-off period applies; rent control for older buildings

Making the Decision

You might prefer Calgary if…You might prefer Vancouver if…
Affordability is your #1 priorityMild winters and ocean access matter most
You want a detached home on a budgetYou work in tech, film/VFX, or Asia-Pacific trade
You work in energy, engineering, or financeYou want the best food scene in Western Canada
You prefer sunshine (even if cold)You prefer rain to extreme cold
You want no PST and no land transfer taxYou value walkability and public transit
You’re building a rental property portfolioLong-term appreciation is your investment thesis
You like the Stampede and a friendly community vibeYou want a cosmopolitan, globally connected city
You want larger living space for your familyYou want proximity to the ocean and world-class landscapes

Impact on Your Mortgage

FactorCalgaryVancouver
Income needed to qualify~$100,000 (avg. home)~$205,000 (avg. home)
Down payment$28,750 (5% on $575K)$95,000 (on $1.2M)
Land transfer tax$0~$20,000 (BC PTT)
First-time buyer incentivesFederal (HBP, FHSA) + no LTT advantageFederal (HBP, FHSA) + BC first-time buyer PTT exemption (up to $835K)
Stress testEasier — lower purchase pricesHarder — many buyers max out debt ratios
Total upfront cash needed~$35,000–$40,000~$130,000–$145,000
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