Calgary offers excellent value: no PST, affordable housing, and high salaries. A single person needs $2,900-$4,400/month.

Monthly Cost Breakdown

Expense Budget Comfortable Premium
Rent (1BR) $1,500 $1,800 $2,200
Utilities $130 $160 $200
Groceries $350 $450 $550
Transportation $112 $200 $400
Phone/internet $100 $120 $150
Health/gym $50 $80 $150
Entertainment $100 $250 $450
Dining out $100 $250 $450
Personal $100 $150 $300
Monthly Total $2,542 $3,460 $4,850
Annual Total $30,504 $41,520 $58,200

Housing Costs

Type Downtown Inner City Suburbs
Studio $1,300 $1,200 $1,100
1-bedroom $1,600 $1,500 $1,300
2-bedroom $2,200 $1,900 $1,600
3-bedroom $2,800 $2,400 $2,000

Calgary housing costs are 30-40% less than Toronto/Vancouver.

The Alberta Advantage

Benefit Impact
No PST (provincial sales tax) Save 7-8% on purchases
Lowest provincial income tax ~10% flat rate
No health premium Unlike Ontario ($900/year)
Lower gas prices $0.15-$0.30/L less

On $80,000 salary:

  • Calgary take-home: ~$60,046
  • Toronto take-home: ~$57,556
  • Alberta advantage: $2,490/year

Transportation

Option Monthly Cost
Calgary Transit pass $112
CTrain + bus $112
Car (financing + insurance + gas) $600-$900

Calgary has lower insurance rates than BC or Ontario.

Salary Needed to Live in Calgary

Lifestyle Annual After-Tax Gross Salary Needed
Budget $30,000 $36,000
Comfortable $41,500 $52,000
Premium $58,000 $76,000

Calgary vs Other Cities

City Monthly Cost vs Calgary
Toronto $4,500 +30%
Vancouver $4,300 +24%
Calgary $3,460
Edmonton $3,100 -10%
Ottawa $3,400 -2%
Montreal $2,800 -19%

Is Calgary Worth It?

Pros:

  • Lowest taxes in Canada
  • No PST
  • Affordable housing (relative to income)
  • High salaries (oil & gas, tech)
  • Close to Rocky Mountains
  • Sunny (most sunny days in Canada)

Cons:

  • Cold winters (-20°C to -30°C)
  • Car-dependent city
  • Oil & gas boom/bust cycles
  • Less diverse than Toronto/Vancouver
WealthVieu
Written by WealthVieu

WealthVieu researches and writes data-driven personal finance guides using primary sources including the IRS, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, and Census Bureau.

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