Toronto and Montreal are Canada’s two largest cities, separated by five hours of highway and fundamentally different housing markets. Toronto is more expensive but offers stronger English-speaking infrastructure. Montreal is more affordable and offers unique opportunities like plexes. This guide breaks down every factor.
Price comparison
| Property Type | Toronto | Montreal | Savings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Detached (central) | $1,500,000 | $850,000 | $650,000 (43%) |
| Detached (suburb) | $1,100,000 | $650,000 | $450,000 (41%) |
| Semi / plex | $1,000,000 | $700,000 (duplex) | $300,000 (30%) |
| Condo (2-bed, central) | $800,000 | $550,000 | $250,000 (31%) |
| Condo (1-bed, central) | $600,000 | $400,000 | $200,000 (33%) |
What the same money buys
| Budget | In Toronto | In Montreal |
|---|---|---|
| $500,000 | 1-bed condo (downtown) | 2-bed condo (Griffintown) or duplex in Hochelaga |
| $700,000 | 2-bed condo or starter semi | Duplex in Verdun/Rosemont or detached in Laval |
| $1,000,000 | Semi in East York / Riverdale | Triplex in Plateau or detached in NDG |
| $1,500,000 | Average detached (Toronto proper) | Premium property almost anywhere in Montreal |
Transfer tax comparison
| Purchase Price | Toronto (Provincial + Municipal LTT) | Montreal (Welcome Tax) | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| $500,000 | $12,950 | $5,732 | Toronto +$7,218 |
| $700,000 | $20,950 | $7,732 | Toronto +$13,218 |
| $1,000,000 | $32,950 | $15,732 | Toronto +$17,218 |
Important differences:
- Toronto FTBs can claim up to $8,475 in rebates (provincial + municipal)
- Montreal has no first-time buyer welcome tax exemption — everyone pays full amount
- Net of FTB rebates, the gap narrows but Toronto is still more expensive
Total closing cost comparison
$700,000 property (first-time buyer, 10% down)
| Cost Item | Toronto | Montreal |
|---|---|---|
| Down payment | $70,000 | $70,000 |
| Provincial/Municipal LTT / Welcome tax | $20,950 | $7,732 |
| FTB rebates | –$8,475 | $0 |
| Legal / notary | $2,200 | $2,000 |
| Title insurance | $400 | $300 |
| Certificate of location | $0 | $1,500 |
| Home inspection | $400 | $500 |
| PST/QST on CMHC | $1,566 (8% ON PST) | $1,952 (9.975% QST) |
| Property tax adjustment | $1,200 | $1,400 |
| Insurance | $800 | $800 |
| Moving | $2,000 | $1,500 |
| Total cash needed | $91,041 | $85,684 |
The plex advantage (Montreal only)
Montreal’s plex market gives buyers an option that barely exists in Toronto:
| Scenario | Toronto — $700K 2-bed Condo | Montreal — $700K Duplex |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly mortgage | $3,644 | $3,644 |
| Rental income | $0 | $1,400/month (second unit) |
| Net mortgage cost | $3,644 | $2,244 |
| Condo fees | $550 | $0 |
| Property tax | $350 | $500 |
| Tax benefit | None | Rental expenses deductible |
| Building equity | One unit | Two units + land |
| Net monthly housing cost | $4,544 | $2,744 |
A Montreal duplex can cut your effective housing cost by 40% while building equity in a freehold asset with rental income.
Income tax comparison
| Taxable Income | Ontario Tax | Quebec Tax | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| $60,000 | $3,033 | $8,400 | QC +$5,367 |
| $80,000 | $4,441 | $12,000 | QC +$7,559 |
| $100,000 | $6,182 | $15,712 | QC +$9,530 |
| $120,000 | $8,383 | $19,737 | QC +$11,354 |
| $150,000 | $12,012 | $25,613 | QC +$13,601 |
Quebec’s higher income tax is the main offset to Montreal’s lower housing costs. However, Quebec also provides:
- $8.70/day daycare (universal) — saves families $10,000–$20,000/year per child vs Ontario
- Lower auto insurance — Quebec’s public system costs $700–$1,200/year vs $1,500–$2,500+ in Ontario
- Prescription drug coverage — Quebec has a mandatory public drug plan
Break-even analysis: housing savings vs tax cost
| Household Income | Annual QC Tax Premium | Housing Savings (mortgage difference on comparable property) | Net Benefit |
|---|---|---|---|
| $80,000 (single) | $7,559 | $10,000–$15,000/year | Montreal wins |
| $120,000 (single) | $11,354 | $15,000–$20,000/year | Montreal wins |
| $150,000 (couple) | $13,601 | $20,000–$30,000/year | Montreal wins |
| $200,000+ (couple) | $18,000+ | $20,000–$30,000/year | Close — depends on property type |
For most income levels, housing savings in Montreal more than offset Quebec’s higher income tax — especially if you buy a plex.
Language and cultural considerations
| Factor | Toronto | Montreal |
|---|---|---|
| Primary language | English | French (with significant bilingual/English areas) |
| English schooling | Full English system, easy access | Certificate of Eligibility required for public English schools |
| Municipal services | English | French (some bilingual service available) |
| Real estate listings | English | Bilingual in Montreal, French-only in suburbs |
| Renovation permits | English | French forms and processes |
| Neighbourhood options (anglophone) | All neighbourhoods | West Island, NDG, Westmount, parts of downtown |
| Career options (English only) | Full range | Limited — many employers (especially public sector) require French |
Bill 96 impact
Quebec’s language law (Bill 96, 2022) strengthened French requirements:
- Contracts must be available in French
- Workplace French requirements are expanding
- Public services are in French first
- For home buying: The process can be done in English, but navigating post-purchase life (city hall, school registration, tenant relations) is significantly easier with French
Quality of life comparison
| Factor | Toronto | Montreal |
|---|---|---|
| Food scene | Excellent — global cuisine, expensive | Excellent — French/fusion/global, more affordable |
| Nightlife | World-class but expensive | World-class and affordable (BYOB restaurants) |
| Arts / festivals | TIFF, Nuit Blanche, Luminato | Just for Laughs, Jazz Festival, Osheaga, Igloofest |
| Winter severity | Cold (–10°C to –20°C), manageable | Colder (–15°C to –30°C), significant snowfall |
| Summer | Warm, humid, lakefront | Warm, outdoor festival season, parc culture |
| Transit | TTC (subway + streetcar + bus) | STM (metro + bus), BIXI bikes, REM light rail |
| Walkability | Good in core, car-dependent in suburbs | Excellent — Montreal is one of Canada’s most walkable cities |
| Cycling infrastructure | Improving | Among the best in North America |
Who should choose each city?
| Your Situation | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| English-only speaker, no plans to learn French | Toronto — Montreal is livable in English but limiting long-term |
| Bilingual or willing to learn French | Montreal — dramatically lower cost for comparable quality of life |
| Want to buy a plex and build rental income | Montreal — plex market barely exists in Toronto at accessible prices |
| Work in Canadian finance / Bay Street | Toronto — industry headquarters |
| Work in tech | Toss-up — both have strong tech sectors; Montreal has AI/gaming edge |
| Family with young children (daycare needs) | Montreal — $8.70/day daycare is a game-changer |
| Household income under $100K | Montreal — significantly more purchasing power |
| Value maximum long-term property appreciation | Toronto — global city premium supports prices |
| Want the best food/culture per dollar spent | Montreal — BYOB dining, affordable festivals, vibrant culture |
| Career mobility (English-speaking network) | Toronto — larger English-language job market |