Montreal has the cheapest transit pass of any major Canadian city at $97/month.
Income Needed to Live in Montreal
Living Situation
Monthly Expenses
Gross Annual Salary Needed
Single (frugal, roommate)
$1,600–$2,000
$30,000–$36,000
Single (own 1-bedroom)
$2,500–$3,300
$44,000–$60,000
Single (comfortable, savings)
$3,300–$4,000
$60,000–$74,000
Couple (1-bedroom)
$3,500–$4,500
$64,000–$82,000 (combined)
Couple (2-bedroom, savings)
$4,200–$5,500
$78,000–$102,000 (combined)
Family of 4 (3-bed, renting)
$5,000–$6,800
$95,000–$128,000
Family of 4 (homeowner, comfortable)
$6,500–$8,500
$124,000–$162,000
Montreal vs Other Canadian Cities
Monthly Expense
Montreal
Toronto
Vancouver
Calgary
Ottawa
1-bed rent
$1,650
$2,400
$2,600
$1,750
$1,900
Groceries (single)
$420
$475
$490
$440
$430
Transit pass
$97
$160
$110
$115
$125
Utilities (1-bed)
$120
$130
$95
$180
$150
Sales tax
14.975%
13%
12%
5%
13%
Total (single)
$2,800
$3,800
$3,900
$2,900
$3,100
Montreal cost of living vs other major Canadian cities
City
1-bed rent
Monthly transit
Avg income tax (on $70K)
Monthly estimate (single)
Montreal
$1,500–$1,800
$97
~$17,500
$2,800–$3,800
Toronto
$2,300–$2,900
$156
~$15,000
$4,200–$5,500
Vancouver
$2,500–$3,200
$105
~$14,500
$4,500–$6,000
Calgary
$1,600–$1,900
$115
~$12,500
$2,900–$3,800
Ottawa
$1,900–$2,400
$125
~$15,500
$3,400–$4,500
Edmonton
$1,350–$1,700
$100
~$12,500
$2,600–$3,400
Note: Montreal’’s lower rents offset Quebec’’s higher income tax burden for most income levels. At $70,000/year, the combined federal + Quebec provincial tax rate is higher than Ontario and significantly higher than Alberta — but Montreal’’s $800–$1,100/month lower housing costs typically more than compensate.
Frequently asked questions
Is Montreal affordable compared to Toronto and Vancouver?
Yes — significantly. Montreal rents are 35–45% lower than Toronto and 40–50% lower than Vancouver. Combined with subsidized daycare ($10–$15/day in Quebec versus $40–$75/day in Ontario), Montreal is one of the most family-affordable major cities in Canada despite Quebec’’s higher income taxes.
What is the language situation for English speakers in Montreal?
Montreal is officially bilingual at the municipal level. The provincial government and most services are in French, and Bill 101 means most workplaces require French. Many professional jobs (tech, finance, federal public service, universities) operate fully in English. Most daily life in central Montreal neighbourhoods can be navigated in either language.