Canada’s average home price is over $650,000, but that number is heavily skewed by Toronto and Vancouver. Dozens of Canadian cities still offer middle-class families the ability to buy a detached home for $200,000–$400,000. Here are the 20 most affordable, ranked by housing cost with factors that actually matter for daily life.
The 20 Cheapest Cities to Live in Canada (2026)
| Rank | City | Province | Avg. Home Price | Avg. Household Income | Price-to-Income Ratio | Key Employers |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Edmundston | NB | $160,000–$190,000 | $65,000 | 2.7 | Twin Rivers Paper, healthcare, bilingual services |
| 2 | Cape Breton (Sydney) | NS | $190,000–$230,000 | $60,000 | 3.5 | Healthcare, tourism, NSCC, marine industries |
| 3 | Saguenay | QC | $220,000–$260,000 | $70,000 | 3.4 | Rio Tinto Alcan, Université du Québec, forestry |
| 4 | Timmins | ON | $240,000–$280,000 | $80,000 | 3.3 | Newmont (gold mining), healthcare, forestry |
| 5 | Prince Albert | SK | $230,000–$270,000 | $70,000 | 3.6 | Agriculture, forestry, Prince Albert National Park |
| 6 | Trois-Rivières | QC | $250,000–$290,000 | $70,000 | 3.9 | UQTR, paper/pulp, manufacturing, healthcare |
| 7 | Thunder Bay | ON | $260,000–$300,000 | $75,000 | 3.7 | Lakehead University, healthcare, Bombardier, forestry |
| 8 | Brandon | MB | $260,000–$300,000 | $72,000 | 3.9 | Maple Leaf Foods, Brandon University, agriculture |
| 9 | Saint John | NB | $270,000–$320,000 | $72,000 | 4.1 | Irving (oil, shipbuilding, forestry), port, healthcare |
| 10 | Moose Jaw | SK | $250,000–$290,000 | $68,000 | 4.0 | Agriculture, CFB Moose Jaw, SaskPower, tourism |
| 11 | Corner Brook | NL | $220,000–$270,000 | $65,000 | 3.8 | Corner Brook Pulp & Paper, healthcare, Marble Mountain |
| 12 | Fredericton | NB | $300,000–$350,000 | $80,000 | 4.1 | Provincial government, UNB, tech sector growing |
| 13 | Regina | SK | $300,000–$350,000 | $85,000 | 3.8 | Provincial government, agriculture, energy, Evraz Steel |
| 14 | Sudbury | ON | $350,000–$400,000 | $85,000 | 4.4 | Vale (nickel mining), Laurentian University, healthcare |
| 15 | Moncton | NB | $310,000–$360,000 | $75,000 | 4.4 | Bilingual call centres, Irving, distribution hub |
| 16 | Winnipeg | MB | $350,000–$400,000 | $85,000 | 4.4 | Diversified — aerospace, agriculture, finance, healthcare |
| 17 | Saskatoon | SK | $370,000–$420,000 | $90,000 | 4.4 | University of Saskatchewan, BHP (potash), tech, agriculture |
| 18 | Sherbrooke | QC | $330,000–$380,000 | $70,000 | 5.1 | Université de Sherbrooke, manufacturing, healthcare |
| 19 | Drummondville | QC | $300,000–$350,000 | $68,000 | 4.8 | Manufacturing, SMEs, affordable bedroom community for MTL commuters |
| 20 | Charlottetown | PE | $380,000–$430,000 | $75,000 | 5.4 | Provincial government, UPEI, tourism, fisheries |
Affordability by Province — Average Home Prices
| Province | Avg. Home Price | Most Affordable City | Least Affordable City |
|---|---|---|---|
| New Brunswick | $270,000–$320,000 | Edmundston ($160K) | Moncton ($335K) |
| Saskatchewan | $300,000–$350,000 | Prince Albert ($250K) | Saskatoon ($395K) |
| Manitoba | $340,000–$380,000 | Brandon ($280K) | Winnipeg ($375K) |
| Quebec (outside MTL) | $280,000–$350,000 | Saguenay ($240K) | Sherbrooke ($355K) |
| Nova Scotia (outside HFX) | $200,000–$280,000 | Cape Breton ($210K) | Truro ($310K) |
| Newfoundland & Labrador | $230,000–$290,000 | Corner Brook ($245K) | St. John’s ($310K) |
| Northern Ontario | $260,000–$360,000 | Timmins ($260K) | Sudbury ($375K) |
| PEI | $370,000–$430,000 | Summerside ($340K) | Charlottetown ($405K) |
| Alberta | $350,000–$450,000 | Lethbridge ($350K) | Calgary ($575K) |
| Ontario (outside GTA) | $400,000–$600,000 | Sault Ste. Marie ($290K) | Barrie ($700K) |
| British Columbia (outside Van) | $450,000–$700,000 | Prince George ($400K) | Kelowna ($750K) |
What Makes a City Truly Affordable
Home price alone doesn’t tell the full story. Here’s what to evaluate:
| Factor | Why It Matters | How to Check |
|---|---|---|
| Price-to-income ratio | A home costing 3–4× household income is affordable; 5×+ is stretched | Average home price ÷ average household income |
| Property tax rate | Some “cheap” cities have high property taxes that eat savings | Municipality website; rates range from 0.5%–2.0% |
| Provincial income tax | Quebec and Nova Scotia have higher tax rates | Tax calculator; can offset housing savings |
| Sales tax (HST/PST) | Affects daily purchases | AB: 5% GST only; NB/NS/NL/PE/ON: 15% HST; QC: 14.975% |
| Utility costs | Northern cities have higher heating costs | $150–$350/month depending on climate and province |
| Commute costs | Even affordable homes cost more if you drive 45+ min to work | Check local drive times |
| Healthcare access | Some smaller cities have limited healthcare | Family doctor availability; hospital proximity |
| Job availability | The cheapest city is worthless if you can’t find work | LocalJobShop, Indeed, local economic development websites |
Best Affordable Cities by Situation
Best for Remote Workers
| City | Why |
|---|---|
| Fredericton, NB | University city, good internet, cultural scene, $300K homes, close to nature |
| Sherbrooke, QC | University city, low costs, European feel, close to Montreal (1.5 hr) |
| Thunder Bay, ON | Lakehead University, stunning Lake Superior scenery, outdoor recreation, $280K homes |
| Saskatoon, SK | Growing tech scene, University of Saskatchewan, no PST, $395K homes with yards |
| Charlottetown, PE | Island lifestyle, tight community, improving internet, ocean access |
Best for Families
| City | Why |
|---|---|
| Winnipeg, MB | Diversified economy, good schools, $375K buys a family home, cultural scene |
| Regina, SK | Government stability, low child‑care costs, no PST, safe neighbourhoods |
| Moncton, NB | Bilingual, growing, family-oriented, strong community, affordable |
| Fredericton, NB | Safe, university city, river trails, family-friendly, affordable |
| Brandon, MB | Small-town feel, excellent schools, strong community, very low housing costs |
Best for Retirees
| City | Why |
|---|---|
| Charlottetown, PE | Island pace of life, healthcare access, friendly community, ocean |
| Corner Brook, NL | Stunning mountain/ocean scenery, low costs, Marble Mountain skiing |
| Trois-Rivières, QC | Affordable, rich history, St. Lawrence River, cultural events |
| Cape Breton, NS | Dramatic scenery, Cabot Trail, lowest housing costs in the Maritimes |
| Saguenay, QC | Fjord scenery, outdoor recreation, very low housing costs, safe |
Best for Young Professionals
| City | Why |
|---|---|
| Saskatoon, SK | Growing economy, young population, nightlife, affordable first home |
| Winnipeg, MB | Exchange District arts scene, diverse food, comedy scene, affordable condos |
| Moncton, NB | Fast-growing, bilingual advantage, new downtown development |
| Fredericton, NB | Tech sector growth (Introhive, Cvent), university energy, $300K starter homes |
| Saint John, NB | Irving employment, port city revitalization, historic uptown, cheapest in the Maritimes (major city) |
Mortgage Affordability in Cheap vs. Expensive Cities
| Metric | Winnipeg ($375,000) | Toronto ($1,100,000) | Savings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Down payment (5%/mixed) | $18,750 | $85,000 | $66,250 |
| CMHC insurance | $14,250 | $40,600 | — |
| Monthly payment (5.2%, 25-yr) | ~$2,315 | ~$6,275 | ~$3,960/month |
| Income needed (stress test) | ~$68,000 | ~$190,000 | $122,000 less |
| Land transfer tax | ~$4,500 (MB) | ~$34,950 | ~$30,450 |
| Total upfront cash needed | ~$25,000 | ~$130,000 | ~$105,000 |
| Annual property tax | ~$4,500 | ~$7,000 | ~$2,500 |
Monthly savings redirected: The ~$4,000/month difference between a Winnipeg and Toronto mortgage could fund $48,000/year in investments, accelerated mortgage paydown, or savings — building long-term wealth far faster than the appreciation difference between the two cities.
Hidden Costs in “Cheap” Cities
| Cost | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Higher heating bills | Prairie and northern cities: $250–$400/month winter heating vs. $150–$250 in Vancouver/Victoria |
| Limited job market | If you lose your job, fewer options locally — may need to relocate |
| Higher auto dependence | Most affordable cities lack robust transit; a car (or two) is essential |
| Travel costs | Smaller airports = fewer direct flights = higher airfare and longer travel times |
| Property tax rates | Some affordable cities have high mill rates (Winnipeg ~1.2%, Saint John ~1.5%) that partially offset low home prices |
| Healthcare gaps | Smaller cities may lack specialists; wait times can be longer |
| Provincial tax rates | NB (14.7% top), NS (21% top), QC (25.75% top) vs. AB (15% flat) or ON (13.16% top) |