Hamilton sits about an hour from downtown Toronto by GO Transit and costs 25–35 % less across the board — making it one of the most popular landing spots for GTA workers priced out of the city. A single person renting a one-bedroom can expect to spend roughly $3,100 a month, compared to $4,000 + in Toronto, while detached homes average $650,000–$750,000 versus Toronto’s $1.2–$1.5 million. The trade-off is a longer commute, more limited local transit, and pockets of air-quality and safety concerns from Hamilton’s steel-industry heritage. But with a growing food and arts scene (James Street North, Locke Street), 100 + waterfalls, and McMaster University anchoring the economy, Hamilton delivers a lot of quality of life per dollar.
Monthly Cost Summary
Expense
Single Person
Couple
Family of 4
Rent (1-bed / 2-bed / 3-bed)
$1,900
$2,400
$2,800
Groceries
$400
$650
$1,000
Transportation
$150
$250
$400
Utilities
$150
$180
$220
Internet + Phone
$130
$180
$200
Insurance (tenant/car)
$200
$350
$500
Entertainment/dining
$200
$300
$350
Childcare
—
—
$1,200
Total
$3,130
$4,310
$6,670
Housing Costs
Rent
Unit Type
Average Rent
Range
Bachelor/Studio
$1,400-$1,600
$1,100-$1,800
1-bedroom
$1,800-$2,000
$1,500-$2,300
2-bedroom
$2,200-$2,600
$1,800-$3,000
3-bedroom
$2,600-$3,000
$2,200-$3,500
Basement apartment
$1,200-$1,500
$900-$1,800
Rent by Neighbourhood
Area
1-Bedroom
Character
Downtown (James St)
$1,800-$2,100
Urban, walkable, arts scene
Westdale
$1,900-$2,200
Near McMaster, family-friendly
Dundas
$2,000-$2,300
Small town feel, Escarpment
Ancaster
$2,100-$2,500
Suburban, upscale
Stoney Creek
$1,800-$2,100
Growing, near lake
East Hamilton (Bartonville)
$1,500-$1,800
Most affordable
Hamilton Mountain
$1,700-$2,000
Suburban, family-friendly
Home Prices
Property Type
Average Price
Range
Detached house
$650,000-$750,000
$450,000-$1,200,000+
Semi-detached
$550,000-$650,000
$400,000-$850,000
Townhouse
$500,000-$600,000
$380,000-$750,000
Condo
$400,000-$500,000
$300,000-$650,000
Monthly Mortgage Costs
Home Price
Down Payment (20%)
Mortgage
Monthly Payment (5%)
$400,000
$80,000
$320,000
$1,860
$550,000
$110,000
$440,000
$2,560
$700,000
$140,000
$560,000
$3,255
Groceries
Item
Hamilton Price
Milk (4L)
$6.50-$7.00
Bread (loaf)
$3.50-$4.50
Eggs (dozen)
$4.50-$5.50
Chicken breast (1 kg)
$14-$17
Ground beef (1 kg)
$10-$14
Rice (2 kg)
$5-$7
Apples (1 kg)
$4-$5
Bananas (1 kg)
$2-$3
Cheese (500 g)
$7-$9
Gasoline (1 litre)
$1.50-$1.70
Monthly Grocery Budget
Amount
Budget-conscious single
$300-$350
Average single
$400-$450
Couple
$600-$750
Family of 4
$900-$1,100
Transportation
Mode
Monthly Cost
HSR bus pass (adult)
$112
HSR bus pass (senior)
$45
HSR bus pass (student)
$90
GO Transit to Toronto (monthly)
$350-$420
Car insurance (average)
$200-$280
Gas (avg commuter)
$150-$200
Parking (downtown)
$100-$200
Commuting to Toronto
Method
One-Way Time
Monthly Cost
GO Bus (Burlington GO → Union)
60-80 min
$350-$420
Driving (QEW/403)
50-90 min (traffic dependent)
$400-$600 (gas + parking)
GO Train (coming soon - planned)
TBD
TBD
Taxes (Hamilton, Ontario)
Tax
Rate
Federal + Provincial income tax ($60K)
~$12,500
Federal + Provincial income tax ($80K)
~$18,000
Federal + Provincial income tax ($100K)
~$22,700
HST (sales tax)
13%
Property tax rate
~1.3% of assessed value
Property tax ($650K home)
~$8,450/year ($704/month)
Hamilton vs Toronto vs Kitchener-Waterloo
Expense
Hamilton
Toronto
Kitchener-Waterloo
1-bed rent
$1,900
$2,500-$2,700
$1,800-$2,000
Detached home
$650-$750K
$1.2-$1.5M
$650-$750K
Groceries (monthly, single)
$400
$450
$400
Transit pass
$112
$156 (TTC)
$90 (GRT)
Car insurance
$240
$280
$220
Childcare (toddler)
$1,200
$1,500
$1,200
Dining (meal for 2)
$70-$90
$90-$120
$65-$85
Overall vs Toronto
25-35% cheaper
Baseline
25-35% cheaper
Income Needed to Live Comfortably
Household
Renting
Owning
Single person
$45,000-$55,000
$75,000-$90,000
Couple (no kids)
$65,000-$80,000
$100,000-$120,000
Family of 4
$90,000-$110,000
$130,000-$160,000
Hamilton Economy and Jobs
Sector
Major Employers
Healthcare
Hamilton Health Sciences, St. Joseph’s Healthcare
Education
McMaster University, Mohawk College
Manufacturing/steel
ArcelorMittal Dofasco, Stelco
Government
City of Hamilton
Tech (growing)
Innovation Factory hub
Food/hospitality
Growing restaurant scene (James St N, Locke St)
Employment Stat
Hamilton
Unemployment rate
~6-7%
Median household income
~$75,000-$80,000
Key industries
Healthcare, manufacturing, education
Commuter city
~30% commute to GTA
Work from home potential
Growing post-pandemic
Pros and Cons of Living in Hamilton
Pros
Cons
25-35% cheaper than Toronto
1+ hour commute to Toronto
100+ waterfalls
Air quality concerns (steel industry)
Growing food/arts scene
Higher crime in some areas
GO Transit to Toronto
Transit within city is limited
McMaster University
Fewer corporate job opportunities than Toronto
Affordable homes (for Ontario)
Prices rising fast
Bruce Trail access
Hamilton Mountain traffic
Lake Ontario waterfront
Industrial waterfront areas
Bottom Line
Hamilton is one of Ontario’s best-value cities for anyone willing to trade Toronto’s transit and nightlife for significantly lower housing costs and a growing local scene. A household income of $90,000–$110,000 supports a comfortable family life as renters; you’ll need $130,000 + to own. Factor in the $350–$420 monthly GO Transit pass if you’re commuting to Toronto, and weigh that against the thousands you save on rent and housing.