Cost of living in Canada vs UK — the side-by-side honest picture
The big question for any British family considering Canada: am I actually better off? The honest answer depends on your city, profession and lifestyle. This 2026 comparison gives you a category-by-category UK vs Canada view so you can make a clean decision rather than relying on social media impressions.
Housing — the single biggest variable
Housing dominates everyone’s cost picture and Canada is bimodal: Toronto and Vancouver are expensive, almost everywhere else is significantly cheaper than the UK equivalent.
- Toronto downtown 1-bed rent: CAD 2,400 vs central London £2,200
- Vancouver downtown 1-bed: CAD 2,800 vs London £2,200
- Calgary 2-bed family: CAD 2,000 vs Manchester £1,400
- Halifax 2-bed family: CAD 1,800 vs Bristol £1,500
- Saskatoon 3-bed detached: CAD 2,000 vs Liverpool £1,200
Groceries and weekly shop
Canada is more expensive on groceries than the UK across most categories. A weekly shop for a family of four:
- UK supermarket family of four: £140
- Canada (Toronto, Vancouver): CAD 350
- Canada (Calgary, Halifax, Winnipeg): CAD 300
Meat, dairy and produce are notably pricier in Canada. Bulk shopping at Costco, Walmart and Real Canadian Superstore narrows the gap.
Utilities
- UK gas + electric + water family of four: £200/month
- Canada hydro + heating + water: CAD 200–350/month (varies by climate)
- Internet UK Virgin/BT: £35 vs Canada Rogers/Bell: CAD 90
- Mobile UK: £20 vs Canada Rogers/Telus: CAD 60
Telecoms are a noticeable Canadian disadvantage — be ready for that.
Transport
- UK rail commute (Surrey to London): £4,000/year
- Toronto TTC monthly: CAD 156
- Petrol UK: £1.45/L vs Canada (varies): CAD 1.50/L
- Car insurance UK: £700/year vs Ontario: CAD 2,000/year
- Car finance: similar both markets
Healthcare
NHS access is free at point of use; Canadian provincial healthcare is also free at point of use after a 3-month residency wait. Dental and vision are private in both markets. Most Canadian employers provide private health insurance (extended benefits) covering dental, vision and prescriptions — a meaningful soft compensation increase relative to the UK.
Childcare
Canada’s national childcare programme caps fees at CAD 10/day in many provinces by 2026 — a transformative reduction from previous CAD 40/day rates. UK childcare averages £15/hour. For UK families with two young children, Canada is now materially cheaper on childcare.
Income — the salary picture
Canadian gross salaries for skilled professions are typically 15–35% higher than UK equivalents in CAD terms. Tax rates are higher in Canada but the gap narrows once you account for council tax, NI and student loan repayments. A London £55k professional often takes home roughly CAD 90k–110k in Canada with a marginally better net position.
Bottom-line for a UK family of four
Annual cost of living for a family of four:
- London suburbs: ~£70,000
- Toronto / Vancouver: ~CAD 115,000
- Calgary / Halifax / Ottawa: ~CAD 95,000
- Smaller cities (Winnipeg, Saskatoon, Moncton): ~CAD 85,000
Pair with typical Canadian salaries and most UK families end up with a comparable or slightly better net position, with materially better housing space and lower childcare.
Your relocation budget
Cost of living is one of the easier variables to model — the harder part is income, taxes and benefits in your specific NOC. Apply now for a Canada Central cost-of-living + income simulation tailored to your UK salary and target Canadian province.






