Burnaby and New Westminster sit side by side in Metro Vancouver's inner ring. They share the Expo Line, similar demographics, and many of the same banks. But they differ significantly in home prices, PTT implications, branch density, and local credit union options. This guide compares both cities across every banking dimension.
Quick Comparison: Burnaby vs New Westminster
| Factor | Burnaby | New Westminster |
|---|---|---|
| Population | ~250,000 | ~80,000 |
| Avg condo price | ~$750,000 | ~$600,000 |
| Avg detached home | ~$1.8M | ~$1.3M |
| PTT on avg condo (general) | ~$13,000 | ~$100 |
| FTB New Home PTT on avg condo | $0 | $0 |
| Resale FTB exemption applicability | Rare (prices too high) | Possible in Uptown |
| Skytrain access | Expo + Millennium Lines | Expo Line only |
| Bank branch density | Higher (Metrotown, Brentwood) | Good (Columbia St) |
| Best local CU | Westminster Savings + Prospera | Westminster Savings (home base) |
| Monthly bank fees saved (KOHO) | Same — $0 either city | Same — $0 either city |
Banking Branch Access
Burnaby has a higher absolute number of bank branches due to its larger population and three major commercial hubs (Metrotown, Brentwood, Lougheed). Metrotown alone has TD, RBC, Scotiabank, CIBC, BMO, Westminster Savings CU, and multiple ATMs within a few blocks. New Westminster's Columbia Street corridor has all major banks within walking distance of the Skytrain station, making branch access excellent for downtown residents despite fewer total branches citywide.
Mortgage Rates: Same Banks, Same Rates
Big bank posted mortgage rates are identical across Burnaby and New Westminster — they're national rates set at head office. The competitive advantage comes from local credit unions: Westminster Savings CU, with roots in New Westminster, has deep expertise in both cities' property markets. Prospera CU serves Burnaby particularly well. In both cities, shopping your mortgage through Westminster Savings, Prospera, or a local mortgage broker typically saves 0.10%–0.25% vs. walking into TD or RBC.
PTT: New Westminster Has the Edge for Affordability
New Westminster's lower average prices mean more buyers qualify for PTT exemptions. In Burnaby, the average condo at $750,000 is well above the $500,000 resale FTB exemption threshold — though new construction under $835,000 still qualifies for the new home FTB exemption. In New Westminster, some older condos in Uptown and Sapperton trade below $500,000, making the resale FTB exemption applicable — a scenario almost impossible in Burnaby's current market.
Best Banks for Both Cities
| Rank | Bank / Institution | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | KOHO | Zero-fee daily banking in both cities |
| 2 | EQ Bank | High-interest savings in both cities |
| 3 | Westminster Savings CU | Mortgages across both cities (home base) |
| 4 | TD Bank | Best big bank branch network in both cities |
| 5 | RBC | Newcomers and multilingual services in both |
Bottom Line Verdict
For banking infrastructure, Burnaby and New Westminster are functionally equivalent — same banks, same credit unions, same online options. New Westminster wins on affordability (lower prices = lower PTT = smaller mortgage) while Burnaby wins on transit connectivity (two Skytrain lines) and branch density near major hubs. For most residents, the best banking setup is identical in both cities: KOHO for daily spending, EQ Bank for savings, and Westminster Savings CU or Prospera CU for your mortgage.
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