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Where to Live in Montreal: Neighbourhoods, Housing Costs & Lifestyle Guide (2026)

Updated

Montreal offers something rare in Canada — a world-class city with genuinely affordable housing. With vibrant culture, excellent food, strong universities, and a growing tech scene, Montreal attracts buyers priced out of Toronto and Vancouver who want urban living without crushing mortgage payments.

Montreal at a glance (2026)

FactorDetails
Population (metro)~4.3 million
Average household income$80,000–$95,000
Average home price (Island of Montreal)$600,000–$650,000
Average home price (Greater Montreal)$525,000–$575,000
Unemployment rate~5.5–6.0%
Major industriesAerospace, AI/tech, gaming, pharmaceuticals, finance, film, education
Transit systemSTM (Métro + bus), REM (new light rail), commuter rail (Exo)
ClimateCold snowy winters (−15°C avg Jan), warm humid summers
Official languageFrench (Bill 96 strengthened requirements)
Provincial sales tax9.975% QST (combined ~15% with GST)

Housing market snapshot

Property TypeIsland of MontrealOff-Island (Laval, South Shore, North Shore)
Detached house$850,000–$1,100,000$450,000–$700,000
Semi-detached/duplex$650,000–$850,000$400,000–$600,000
Triplex/plex$700,000–$900,000$500,000–$700,000
Condo apartment$400,000–$500,000$280,000–$400,000
Price per sq ft (condo)$500–$750$350–$500

Quebec-specific costs

CostDetails
Welcome tax (droits de mutation)0.5% on first $55,200, 1% on $55,200–$276,200, 1.5% on $276,200–$500,000, 2% above $500,000, 2.5% above $1M (Montreal)
GST/QST on new construction5% GST + 9.975% QST on new builds (rebates available up to certain price thresholds)
School tax (taxe scolaire)~$0.08–$0.11 per $100 of assessed value
Property tax (municipal)Varies by borough — roughly 0.7–1.0% of assessed value
Notary fees (not lawyer)$1,200–$2,500 for purchase closing

Mortgage affordability by property type

ScenarioCondo ($450,000)Plex ($800,000)Detached ($950,000)
Down payment$22,500 (5%)$55,000 (5% on $500K + 10% on $300K)$95,000 (10%)
CMHC insurance$17,100 (4.0%)$29,800 (4.0%)$26,505 (3.1%)
Mortgage amount$444,600$774,800$881,505
Monthly payment (4.5%, 25yr)$2,467$4,299$4,891
Income needed (stress test)~$90,000~$155,000~$175,000
Welcome tax~$5,500~$12,500~$15,500
Annual property tax~$3,000–$4,000~$5,500–$7,500~$7,000–$9,000

Key advantage: Montreal’s plex market (duplexes, triplexes) lets you buy a property, live in one unit, and rent the others — rental income can cover 50–80% of your mortgage payment. This is the city’s secret weapon for affordability.

Neighbourhood guide: Island of Montreal

Downtown and Ville-Marie

NeighbourhoodAverage Condo PriceAverage House/Plex PriceCharacterBest For
Old Montreal (Vieux-Montréal)$500,000–$800,000N/A (few houses)Historic, cobblestones, tourist areaProfessionals, urban lovers
Griffintown$400,000–$600,000$800,000–$1,100,000New condo towers, trendy restaurants, canal-sideYoung professionals, investors
Downtown/Golden Square Mile$450,000–$700,000$1,200,000–$2,000,000+High-rise, McGill area, corporateProfessionals, students, downsizers
Plateau Mont-Royal$450,000–$650,000$800,000–$1,200,000Iconic Montreal — triplexes, cafés, cultureArtists, young families, francophone culture lovers

Central neighbourhoods

NeighbourhoodAverage Condo PriceAverage House/Plex PriceCharacterBest For
Mile End$450,000–$650,000$850,000–$1,100,000Creative hub, bagels, tech startupsCreatives, tech workers
Outremont$500,000–$700,000$1,000,000–$1,800,000Upscale francophone, tree-lined, Université de MontréalAffluent francophone families
Rosemont–La Petite-Patrie$400,000–$550,000$700,000–$950,000Family-friendly, Jean-Talon Market, improving rapidlyYoung families, good value
Villeray$380,000–$500,000$650,000–$850,000Rising star, diverse, more affordable Plateau alternativeFirst-time buyers, young families
Verdun$350,000–$500,000$600,000–$800,000Waterfront revival, Wellington Street, strong valueBudget-conscious buyers, young professionals

Anglophone West Island and NDG

NeighbourhoodAverage Condo PriceAverage House PriceCharacterBest For
Notre-Dame-de-Grâce (NDG)$350,000–$500,000$750,000–$1,100,000Bilingual, university area, Monkland VillageBilingual families, anglophone community
Westmount$600,000–$900,000$1,500,000–$4,000,000+Montreal’s most upscale neighbourhoodHigh-income anglophone families
Côte-des-Neiges$300,000–$450,000$600,000–$900,000Diverse, student-heavy, near hospitals and universitiesNewcomers, students, budget buyers
Pointe-Claire/Dorval$350,000–$500,000$500,000–$800,000Suburban West Island, anglophone, lakefrontAnglophone families, commuters
Beaconsfield/Baie-d’Urfé$400,000–$550,000$600,000–$1,000,000Affluent West Island suburbs, larger lotsFamilies wanting space, anglophone schools

East Montreal

NeighbourhoodAverage Condo PriceAverage House/Plex PriceCharacterBest For
Hochelaga-Maisonneuve$300,000–$450,000$550,000–$750,000Gentrifying, Olympic Stadium area, edgyBudget buyers, investors
Mercier$300,000–$400,000$500,000–$700,000Quiet, working class, more affordableFamilies seeking value
Rivière-des-Prairies$280,000–$400,000$450,000–$650,000Suburban feel on the island, diverseFamilies, first-time buyers
Anjou$300,000–$400,000$500,000–$700,000Quiet, near highways, affordableValue seekers

Off-island suburbs

AreaAverage CondoAverage HouseTransit AccessBest For
Laval$280,000–$400,000$450,000–$650,000Métro (2 stations), REM (coming), busFamilies wanting space and value
Longueuil/Brossard$300,000–$420,000$450,000–$650,000Métro (Longueuil), REM (Brossard)South Shore families, Asian food scene
Saint-Bruno/Saint-Hubert$280,000–$380,000$400,000–$600,000Exo commuter railQuiet suburban life
Blainville/Mirabel$250,000–$350,000$400,000–$550,000Limited transit (car-dependent)Maximum space for budget
Châteauguay$250,000–$350,000$350,000–$500,000BusAffordable family homes

Transit and commuting

Transit OptionCoverageMonthly Cost
STM Métro (4 lines)Island of Montreal$97/month (adult pass)
STM BusIsland of MontrealIncluded in Métro pass
REM (new light rail)Downtown → South Shore, West Island, airportIncluded in ARTM pass ($97–$152)
Exo commuter railSuburbs (5 lines)$152–$200/month (TRAM pass)
BIXI bike shareIsland of Montreal$99/year

Commute times to Downtown

FromTransitDriving (rush hour)
Plateau Mont-Royal10–15 min (Métro)15–25 min
NDG15–20 min (bus/Métro)15–30 min
Verdun15–20 min (Métro/REM)15–25 min
Laval (Montmorency)25–30 min (Métro)30–50 min
Brossard (REM)15–20 min (REM)30–50 min
West Island (Pointe-Claire)25–35 min (REM/train)35–55 min
Longueuil15–20 min (Métro)25–40 min

Cost of living beyond housing

ExpenseMonthly Cost (single)Monthly Cost (family of 4)
Groceries$350–$500$900–$1,300
Utilities (Hydro-Québec)$80–$150 (very cheap)$120–$250
Car insurance$100–$200$200–$350 (two cars)
Childcare (one child)N/A$190/month (subsidized $8.70/day)
Dining out$150–$350$250–$500
Entertainment/fitness$80–$200$150–$350
Total (excluding housing)$760–$1,400$1,810–$3,050

Key advantages: Hydro-Québec provides the cheapest electricity in North America. Quebec’s $8.70/day subsidized childcare saves families $10,000–$20,000+ per year. Car insurance is significantly cheaper than Ontario or BC.

Language considerations

FactorDetails
Official languageFrench — Bill 96 strengthened requirements in 2022
Bilingual neighbourhoodsDowntown, NDG, Westmount, West Island, parts of Plateau
French-dominant areasEast Montreal, Rosemont, Villeray, Laval, South Shore
Workplace languageBusinesses with 25+ employees must operate in French (Bill 96 expansion)
Government servicesFrench is the default; English services available but not guaranteed
SchoolsChildren of non-anglophone parents must attend French school (Bill 101)
Real estate transactionsCan be conducted in English; notarial documents available in English upon request
Impact on careerSome jobs (especially government, healthcare, education) require functional French

Pros and cons of living in Montreal

ProsCons
Most affordable major city in Canada for housingHigher provincial income taxes than Ontario/Alberta
World-class food, festivals, and cultureCold, snowy winters (but city manages snow well)
$8.70/day subsidized childcareLanguage barrier for anglophones in many contexts
Cheapest electricity in North AmericaBill 96 creates challenges for English-only residents
Plex market enables owner-landlord strategyInfrastructure maintenance (potholes, aging buildings)
Strong tech/AI/gaming sector (growing rapidly)Lower salaries than Toronto in many sectors
Walkable, bikeable core neighbourhoodsSome neighbourhoods feel neglected (east end)
Vibrant arts and music sceneRoad construction seems perpetual
Excellent universities (McGill, UdeM, Concordia, HEC)Car-dependent suburbs

First-time buyer strategy for Montreal

StrategyDetails
Consider a plexBuy a duplex or triplex, live in one unit, rent the others — rental income can cover most of your mortgage
Target Villeray, Verdun, or RosemontBest value central neighbourhoods with strong appreciation potential
Use FHSA + RRSP HBPUp to $75,000 in tax-advantaged savings
Budget for the welcome taxDroits de mutation range from $2,000 to $15,000+ depending on price
Factor in Quebec taxesHigher income taxes reduce take-home pay — budget accordingly
Leverage cheap Hydro-Québec ratesLow utility costs effectively reduce your monthly housing cost
Take advantage of subsidized childcare$8.70/day saves $10,000–$20,000/year per child vs Ontario or BC

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