Cost of Living in Victoria BC 2026 | Complete Breakdown
Updated
Quick Cost Summary
Expense
Monthly Cost (Single)
Monthly Cost (Family of 4)
Rent (1BR / 3BR)
$2,100
$3,200
Utilities
$130
$200
Groceries
$500
$1,200
Transportation
$95 (transit) / $550 (car)
$750 (car)
Cell phone
$60
$120
Internet
$80
$80
Entertainment
$180
$350
Insurance (tenant/home)
$50
$80
Total
$3,195-$3,650
$5,980-$6,730
Housing
Average Rent
Unit Type
Central Victoria
Suburbs
Change YoY
Studio
$1,600
$1,300
+5%
1-bedroom
$2,200
$1,900
+6%
2-bedroom
$2,900
$2,400
+5%
3-bedroom
$3,500
$2,900
+4%
Average Home Prices
Property Type
Price
Change YoY
Detached house
$1,100,000
+3%
Townhouse
$750,000
+4%
Condo
$550,000
+3%
Greater Victoria average
$900,000
+3%
Victoria vs Other BC Cities
City
Average Home Price
Avg Rent (1BR)
Vancouver
$1,200,000
$2,700
Victoria
$900,000
$2,100
Kelowna
$750,000
$1,800
Nanaimo
$600,000
$1,600
Best Neighbourhoods by Budget
Budget
Neighbourhood
Avg Rent (1BR)
Budget-friendly
Langford, Colwood, Sooke
$1,600-$1,900
Mid-range
Esquimalt, Saanich, View Royal
$1,800-$2,200
Higher-end
James Bay, Fairfield, Oak Bay
$2,100-$2,600
Groceries
Item
Victoria Price
Vancouver Price
Milk (4L)
$6.50
$6.50
Bread (loaf)
$4.20
$4.00
Eggs (dozen)
$5.00
$4.80
Chicken breast (1kg)
$15.50
$15.00
Apples (1kg)
$5.00
$4.80
Monthly grocery bill (single)
$500
$520
Victoria grocery prices are similar to Vancouver. Island shipping adds a small premium on some items.
Transportation
Option
Monthly Cost
BC Transit pass
$95
Gas (per litre)
$1.60-$1.80
ICBC insurance
$150-$220/month
Ferry (Victoria-Vancouver)
$18.75/trip (passenger) or $63.25 (with car)
Parking (downtown)
$150-$250/month
Total car cost
$500-$800/month
Victoria Transit
Feature
Details
Bus coverage
Good in core, limited in West Shore
Rapid transit
No SkyTrain — bus only
Bike-friendly
Excellent cycling infrastructure
Walkability
High in downtown, James Bay, Fernwood
Utilities
Utility
Monthly Cost
Electricity (BC Hydro)
$60-$90
Heating (electric/gas)
$50-$100
Water
Often included in rent
Internet
$70-$100
Cell phone
$50-$80
BC Hydro rates are low (~$0.10/kWh). Victoria’s mild climate means much lower heating costs than the rest of Canada.
Income Taxes (BC)
Income
Federal + Provincial Tax
Effective Rate
Take-Home
$50,000
$8,500
17.0%
$41,500
$70,000
$14,200
20.3%
$55,800
$90,000
$20,800
23.1%
$69,200
$110,000
$28,500
25.9%
$81,500
Income Needed to Live Comfortably
Household
Annual Income Needed
Monthly After Tax
Single, renting
$65,000-$75,000
$3,800-$4,200
Couple, renting
$100,000-$120,000
$5,800-$6,700
Family of 4, renting
$110,000-$140,000
$6,300-$7,600
Single, homeowner
$80,000-$100,000
$4,600-$5,400
Average Salaries in Victoria
Industry
Average Salary
Government (federal/provincial)
$65,000-$90,000
Technology
$70,000-$100,000
Healthcare
$60,000-$90,000
Education
$55,000-$75,000
Tourism/Hospitality
$32,000-$45,000
Construction/Trades
$55,000-$80,000
Overall average
$55,000-$65,000
Victoria’s economy is heavily government-driven, with the BC Legislature and numerous federal offices. Tech is growing (VIATEC cluster) but smaller than Vancouver’s.
Victoria vs Other Cities
Category
Victoria
Vancouver
Toronto
Calgary
Rent (1BR)
$2,100
$2,700
$2,500
$1,800
Home price
$900,000
$1,200,000
$1,100,000
$580,000
Groceries
$500/mo
$520/mo
$500/mo
$450/mo
Transit pass
$95
$110
$156
$112
Climate
Mild year-round
Rainy winters
Cold winters
Cold, chinooks
Overall index
95
107
100
85
Pros and Cons of Living in Victoria
Pros
Cons
Mildest climate in Canada
High housing costs
Beautiful natural setting
Island isolation (ferry + flights)
Bike-friendly, walkable core
Smaller job market
Lower taxes than Ontario
No SkyTrain/rapid transit
Government job stability
Higher grocery costs (island premium)
Active outdoor lifestyle
Limited nightlife vs. Vancouver/Toronto
Lower crime rate
Getting to mainland is expensive and slow
Tips for Moving to Victoria
Secure housing before moving — vacancy rate is under 1.5%, one of the tightest in Canada
Consider Langford or Colwood — 25% cheaper than downtown with growing amenities
Budget for ferry costs — visiting Vancouver costs $60-$130 round trip
A car is helpful but not essential — downtown is very walkable, cycling is excellent
Government jobs — check federal and BC provincial job boards for stable opportunities
BC First-Time Home Buyers’ Exemption — full exemption on properties under $500K, partial up to $525K
Prepare for summer peak — tourist influx raises costs and congestion June-September