Updated: April 2025  |  bremo.io financial guides

Cheapest Cities to Live in Canada 2025: Full Ranked List

Canada's housing affordability crisis has put cost of living front and centre for millions of Canadians making relocation decisions. Where can you actually afford to live — and live well — in 2025? This guide ranks major and mid-sized Canadian cities by overall affordability, factoring in rent, home prices, taxes, and daily living costs.

Methodology: Rankings consider 1-bedroom rent, average home purchase price, provincial tax burden, and general daily living costs. "Cheapest" reflects overall cost-of-living burden, not just one factor.

Major Cities Ranked by Affordability (2025)

RankCityAvg 1BR RentAvg Home PriceTax Burden
1Winnipeg, MB$1,200–$1,500~$360KModerate
2Edmonton, AB$1,400–$1,800~$430KLow (no prov. tax)
3Regina, SK$1,100–$1,400~$320KModerate
4Saskatoon, SK$1,200–$1,500~$360KModerate
5Quebec City, QC$1,300–$1,700~$400KHigh (QC rates)
6London, ON$1,500–$1,800~$580KModerate
7Winnipeg (see #1)
8Calgary, AB$1,900–$2,200~$590KLow (no prov. tax)
9Montreal, QC$1,800–$2,200~$550KHigh (QC rates)
10Ottawa, ON$2,000–$2,400~$650KModerate

The Most Affordable Major Cities in Depth

1. Winnipeg, Manitoba — Canada's Affordability Champion

Winnipeg holds the title for the most affordable major city in Canada in 2025. Average home price of $360K, rent starting below $1,300/month for a 1-bedroom, and Manitoba's moderate taxes make it unrivalled for pure affordability. The cold winters are the main deterrent. For those who can handle -30°C weeks in January, Winnipeg offers the most financial breathing room of any major Canadian city.

2. Edmonton, Alberta — Best Tax-Adjusted Affordability

Edmonton combines Winnipeg-adjacent housing costs with Alberta's no-provincial-income-tax advantage. The tax savings are so significant that Edmonton arguably offers the best after-tax affordability of any major Canadian city. Average home price ~$430K, rent starting around $1,400/month.

3. Regina and Saskatoon, Saskatchewan

Saskatchewan's two major cities are often overlooked in affordability discussions. Home prices in the $300K–$380K range and rents well below national averages make them compelling for those whose careers are compatible with these markets. Oil-adjacent economy, agriculture, potash, and growing tech presence provide employment.

4. Quebec City, Quebec

Quebec City offers extraordinary quality of life — a UNESCO World Heritage historic district, vibrant French culture, excellent food — at costs dramatically below Montreal. Rents average $1,100–$1,600 for a 1-bedroom; homes average $380,000–$420,000. The trade-off: you really need to speak French, and the English-language job market is extremely limited.

5. London, Ontario

London is Ontario's affordability standout among mid-sized cities. University town (Western + Fanshawe), major healthcare employers, and a growing tech scene give it career options alongside 1-bedroom rents in the $1,500–$1,800 range and homes averaging ~$580K. The 2-hour drive to Toronto is manageable for occasional visits without needing to live there.

Mid-Sized Cities: Serious Affordability Options

CityProvinceAvg 1BR RentAvg Home
Thunder BayON$1,100–$1,400~$290K
SudburyON$1,100–$1,400~$310K
Sault Ste MarieON$1,000–$1,300~$250K
LethbridgeAB$1,200–$1,500~$320K
Red DeerAB$1,200–$1,600~$330K
MonctonNB$1,300–$1,700~$290K
Saint JohnNB$1,100–$1,400~$250K

New Brunswick (Moncton, Fredericton, Saint John) represents exceptional value for remote workers. Home prices in the $250K–$320K range, rents below $1,500, and a growing remote-work community have made NB increasingly popular. The province also offers attractive immigration and relocation incentives.

What "Cheap" Really Costs You

Affordability always comes with trade-offs. The cheapest cities typically have some combination of: fewer job opportunities, colder winters, smaller cultural scenes, and limited airport connections. The question isn't just "what's cheapest?" but "what's the best value for my specific situation?"

For a remote worker who can earn Toronto wages while living in Moncton or Winnipeg, the financial advantage is extraordinary — potentially $25,000–$40,000/year better off. For someone who needs to be in Toronto for their career, the calculation is different.

The Remote Work Transformation

Remote work has fundamentally changed affordability calculations for knowledge workers. A developer earning $120K remotely in Winnipeg pays roughly $1,400/month in rent and no land transfer tax — an after-rent income of nearly $7,000/month. The same person in Toronto earning $130K pays $2,600/month in rent, leaving roughly $5,800/month. Winnipeg wins, dramatically, even at a $10K salary penalty.

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