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

Updated

Vancouver consistently ranks among the world’s most livable cities — and its most expensive housing markets. Nestled between mountains and ocean, the city offers an extraordinary natural setting paired with a cosmopolitan lifestyle. The trade-off is housing costs that require creative financial planning for most buyers.

Vancouver at a glance (2026)

FactorDetails
Population (metro)~2.8 million
Average household income$90,000–$105,000
Average home price (City of Vancouver)$1,150,000–$1,250,000
Average home price (Metro Vancouver)$1,000,000–$1,100,000
Unemployment rate~5.5–6.0%
Major industriesTech, film/TV, natural resources, port/logistics, tourism, real estate
Transit systemSkyTrain, bus (TransLink), SeaBus
ClimateMild, rainy winters; warm, dry summers
Provincial sales tax7% PST (separate from 5% GST)

Housing market snapshot

Property TypeCity of VancouverMetro Vancouver (suburbs)
Detached house$1,800,000–$2,200,000$1,100,000–$1,600,000
Townhouse$1,000,000–$1,200,000$650,000–$900,000
Condo apartment$700,000–$800,000$450,000–$600,000
Price per sq ft (condo)$900–$1,200$550–$800

BC-specific costs

CostDetails
Property transfer tax1% on first $200K, 2% on $200K–$2M, 3% above $2M
First-time buyer exemptionFull exemption up to $500K, partial to $525K (PTT), plus newly built home exemption up to $750K
Speculation and vacancy tax0.5–2% on vacant/underused properties in designated areas
Foreign buyer banFederal ban on non-resident purchases (extended to 2027)
Empty homes tax (Vancouver)3% of assessed value on empty properties

Mortgage affordability by property type

ScenarioCondo ($750,000)Townhouse ($1,100,000)Detached ($2,000,000)
Down payment$75,000 (10%)$220,000 (20%)$400,000 (20%)
CMHC insurance$20,925 (3.1%)$0$0
Mortgage amount$695,925$880,000$1,600,000
Monthly payment (4.5%, 25yr)$3,861$4,883$8,878
Income needed (stress test)~$140,000~$190,000~$345,000
Property transfer tax~$13,000~$20,000~$38,000
Annual property tax~$2,500–$3,500~$4,000–$5,500~$7,000–$12,000

Neighbourhood guide: City of Vancouver

Downtown and West End

NeighbourhoodAverage Condo PriceCharacterBest For
Downtown/Coal Harbour$750,000–$1,000,000High-rise, waterfront, walkableProfessionals, urban lifestyle
Yaletown$700,000–$950,000Trendy, restaurants, seawall accessYoung professionals, couples
West End$600,000–$800,000Dense, diverse, near Stanley Park and English BayRenters-turned-owners, LGBTQ+ community
Gastown/Chinatown$550,000–$750,000Historic, arts scene, rapidly changingCreatives, urban pioneers

Westside Vancouver

NeighbourhoodAverage Condo PriceAverage House PriceCharacterBest For
Kitsilano$700,000–$900,000$2,200,000–$3,000,000Beach lifestyle, yoga culture, restaurantsActive professionals, families
Point Grey/UBC$750,000–$1,000,000$2,800,000–$4,500,000+University area, prestigious, ocean viewsAcademics, affluent families
Kerrisdale$650,000–$850,000$2,500,000–$3,800,000Tree-lined, family-oriented, upscaleEstablished families
Dunbar/Southlands$600,000–$800,000$2,200,000–$3,500,000Quiet, excellent schools, near Pacific Spirit ParkFamilies with children
Cambie Corridor$650,000–$850,000$1,800,000–$2,500,000Rapid development along Canada Line, new towersFamilies, transit-oriented buyers

Eastside Vancouver

NeighbourhoodAverage Condo PriceAverage House PriceCharacterBest For
Mount Pleasant$650,000–$850,000$1,500,000–$2,000,000Artsy, breweries, Main Street cultureYoung families, creatives
Commercial Drive$550,000–$750,000$1,400,000–$1,800,000Bohemian, Italian heritage, diverseDiverse households, artists
East Vancouver (Hastings-Sunrise)$500,000–$700,000$1,300,000–$1,700,000Improving rapidly, character homesFirst-time buyers, families
Renfrew-Collingwood$450,000–$650,000$1,200,000–$1,600,000Diverse, affordable (relatively), SkyTrainBudget-conscious families
South Vancouver (Marpole/Sunset)$500,000–$700,000$1,400,000–$1,800,000Quiet, family homes, transit improvingFamilies, multigenerational

Neighbourhood guide: Metro Vancouver suburbs

Inner suburbs

MunicipalityAverage CondoAverage TownhouseAverage HouseSkyTrain AccessBest For
Burnaby$550,000–$700,000$850,000–$1,050,000$1,500,000–$2,000,000Yes (Expo + Millennium)Families wanting urban amenities + transit
New Westminster$500,000–$650,000$750,000–$900,000$1,200,000–$1,600,000Yes (Expo)Value seekers, history lovers
North Vancouver$600,000–$800,000$900,000–$1,100,000$1,600,000–$2,200,000SeaBus + busOutdoor enthusiasts, families
West Vancouver$800,000–$1,200,000$1,500,000+$2,500,000–$5,000,000+Bus onlyAffluent buyers, ocean/mountain views

Outer suburbs

MunicipalityAverage CondoAverage TownhouseAverage HouseTransitBest For
Surrey$400,000–$550,000$650,000–$850,000$1,100,000–$1,500,000SkyTrain (expanding)Families, affordability
Coquitlam$500,000–$650,000$750,000–$950,000$1,300,000–$1,700,000Evergreen SkyTrainFamilies, nature access
Langley$400,000–$550,000$600,000–$800,000$1,000,000–$1,400,000SkyTrain coming (2028)Families, value + space
Maple Ridge$350,000–$500,000$550,000–$750,000$900,000–$1,200,000West Coast ExpressSpace seekers, rural feel
Port Moody$500,000–$650,000$800,000–$1,000,000$1,400,000–$1,700,000Evergreen SkyTrainOutdoor lifestyle, young families

Transit and commuting

Transit OptionCoverageMonthly Cost
SkyTrain (Expo, Millennium, Canada Line)Vancouver, Burnaby, New West, Surrey, Coquitlam, Richmond$104–$181/month (1–3 zones)
Bus network (TransLink)All of Metro VancouverIncluded in monthly pass
SeaBusDowntown ↔ North VancouverIncluded in monthly pass
West Coast ExpressDowntown ↔ Mission (peak hours only)$200–$340/month
CyclingExtensive separated bike lanes in VancouverFree (bike share $129/year)

Commute times to Downtown Vancouver

FromTransitDriving (rush hour)
Kitsilano15–20 min (bus)15–30 min
Burnaby (Metrotown)20–25 min (SkyTrain)30–45 min
North Vancouver15–20 min (SeaBus)20–40 min
Surrey (King George)40–50 min (SkyTrain)45–75 min
Coquitlam (Lafarge)35–45 min (SkyTrain)40–60 min
Langley60–75 min (bus + SkyTrain)50–80 min

Cost of living beyond housing

ExpenseMonthly Cost (single)Monthly Cost (family of 4)
Groceries$400–$600$1,000–$1,400
Utilities$100–$200 (hydro is cheap)$150–$300
Car insurance (ICBC)$200–$350$350–$600 (two cars)
Childcare (one child)N/A$1,000–$1,800
Dining out$200–$400$300–$600
Entertainment/fitness$100–$250$200–$400
Total (excluding housing)$1,000–$1,800$3,000–$5,100

Note: BC Hydro rates are among the lowest in North America, keeping utility costs down. However, ICBC (mandatory car insurance) is among the most expensive in Canada.

Pros and cons of living in Vancouver

ProsCons
Spectacular natural beauty (mountains, ocean, parks)Canada’s most expensive housing market
Mild climate — Canada’s warmest wintersRain: 160+ rainy days per year (Nov–Mar)
Excellent outdoor recreation year-roundIncome-to-housing ratio is extreme
Strong tech sector (growing “Silicon Valley North”)Lower average salaries than Toronto for many sectors
Diverse, multicultural food sceneCar insurance (ICBC) is very expensive
SkyTrain is efficient and expandingDetached homes essentially unattainable for average earners
Proximity to Whistler, Gulf Islands, Pacific RimLimited east-west transit (improving slowly)
Healthy, active lifestyle cultureFewer corporate headquarters than Toronto

First-time buyer strategy for Vancouver

StrategyDetails
Start with a condo in the suburbsSurrey, Langley, Coquitlam condos from $400,000–$550,000 are the most accessible entry
Use the BC first-time buyer PTT exemptionFull property transfer tax exemption up to $500,000, partial up to $525,000
Target SkyTrain corridorsProperties near current or planned SkyTrain stations hold value best
Consider presale condosLock in today’s price, close in 2–3 years — but research the developer carefully
Explore co-ownershipBC allows fractional ownership and co-buying — pooling resources with family or friends
Use FHSA + RRSP HBPUp to $75,000 in tax-advantaged savings for your down payment
Don’t wait for a crashVancouver has had brief corrections (2018–2019, 2022–2023) but always recovers — supply is constrained by geography

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