Cost of living in Vancouver, North America
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Is it cheaper to live in Canada or the US?

City North America Updated July 2026

Canada is modestly cheaper than the US on monthly cost-of-living averages, but Vancouver specifically is one of the higher-cost Canadian cities and the US comparison gets closer there. Vancouver moderate is $3,300 per person per month versus the US national average of $3,525, a gap of about $225 a month (roughly 6 percent). Calgary at $2,750 and Toronto at $3,075 both undercut the US average more clearly. The composition of spend matters: Canadian housing is generally pricier per square foot in major metros than equivalent US metros, but the no-out-of-pocket healthcare line, lower gun-violence-related insurance and security costs, and lower prescription drug costs offset much of the gap for households. Tax wedges are higher in Canada at most income brackets. For a Vancouver-to-US comparison specifically, Vancouver is dramatically cheaper than San Francisco or NYC and modestly cheaper than Seattle or Boston. For the full breakdown, see our Vancouver cost of living page.

About the author

Jo Berks

Jo Berks

Global Cost of Living Research & Data Analyst

Jo is an independent researcher with over a decade of experience delivering data, analysis, and structured reports across multiple industries. Her work focuses on sourcing and validating datasets to produce clear, usable insights. At CostLiving, she analyses global pricing data and identifies regional cost trends to support research-led content and comparative resources.

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