Canada and the United States share the world's longest border and many cultural similarities — but their cost-of-living profiles are meaningfully different. With the Canadian dollar trading at approximately $0.73–$0.75 USD, many cross-border comparisons are complicated by currency. This guide compares costs in both currencies' home contexts, focusing on what residents in each country actually experience.
All Canada vs USA comparisons must account for the exchange rate. As of 2025, $1 CAD ≈ $0.73–$0.75 USD. This means:
| Cost | Canada | USA |
|---|---|---|
| Doctor visit | $0 (covered) | $150–$300 without insurance |
| Emergency room visit | $0–$100 (covered) | $1,500–$5,000+ |
| Hospitalization (week) | $0 (covered) | $15,000–$50,000+ |
| Health insurance premiums | $0–$100/month (most provinces) | $400–$1,500/month |
| Prescription drugs | $30–$150 (often not covered) | Variable; often more expensive |
| Dental (basic cleaning) | $150–$300 (not covered) | $100–$300 (often partially covered) |
Healthcare is Canada's most significant financial advantage over the US. A serious illness or injury in the US without insurance can produce $100,000+ in medical debt — a financial catastrophe that simply doesn't happen in Canada. For Canadians comparing the two countries, universal healthcare is worth an estimated $5,000–$20,000/year in avoided out-of-pocket costs and insurance premiums, depending on health status.
| City Comparison | Canadian City | Comparable US City | Cheaper |
|---|---|---|---|
| Toronto vs New York City | $2,600/mo (1BR) | $3,800/mo (1BR) | Canada |
| Vancouver vs San Francisco | $2,800/mo (1BR) | $3,200/mo (1BR) | Canada (CAD terms) |
| Calgary vs Houston | $2,000/mo (1BR) | $1,400/mo (1BR) | USA |
| Montreal vs Chicago | $2,000/mo (1BR) | $1,900/mo (1BR) | Comparable |
| Edmonton vs Denver | $1,600/mo (1BR) | $1,700/mo (1BR) | Canada (slight) |
Canadian coastal cities (Toronto, Vancouver, Victoria) are somewhat cheaper than their direct US equivalents (NYC, San Francisco). Canadian prairie cities are more expensive than comparable mid-tier US cities like Houston, Dallas, Phoenix, or Nashville. In USD terms, Canadian costs look lower but incomes are proportionally lower too.
| Item | Canada (CAD) | USA (USD) | USD Equivalent (Canada) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chicken breast (1kg) | $12–$18 | $7–$12 | $9–$13 |
| Milk (4L) | $5–$7 | $4–$6 (1 gallon) | Similar |
| Eggs (12) | $5–$7 | $4–$6 | Similar |
| Monthly groceries (single) | $460–$700 CAD | $350–$550 USD | ~$360–$525 USD |
Canadian grocery prices have historically been higher than US prices even in USD terms, partly due to supply management policies (dairy, poultry) that maintain domestic price floors. Canadians near the US border often cross for grocery shopping, particularly for dairy, poultry, and produce. Overall, Canadian grocery costs in USD are 10–20% higher than comparable US cities.
| Tax Type | Canada | USA | Higher Tax |
|---|---|---|---|
| Federal + state/prov income ($100K) | 28–34% (effective) | 20–35% (varies by state) | Canada (usually higher) |
| Sales tax | 5–15% (GST/HST/PST) | 0–10% (no federal sales tax) | Canada (higher) |
| Property tax (% of value) | 0.5–1.5% | 0.5–2.5% | Similar |
| Capital gains tax | Federal + prov (up to 27%) | 0–20% (federal only, plus state) | Comparable |
| Role | Canada (CAD) | USA (USD) | USD Equivalent (Canada) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mid Software Developer | $90K–$130K | $120K–$200K | $66K–$95K |
| Senior Software Developer | $130K–$200K | $180K–$350K | $95K–$146K |
| Data Scientist | $90K–$140K | $130K–$220K | $66K–$102K |
| Doctor (specialist) | $200K–$400K | $300K–$600K | $146K–$292K |
| Nurse (RN) | $70K–$95K | $70K–$120K | $51K–$69K |
US tech salaries are dramatically higher than Canadian equivalents in USD terms — often 50–100% higher for comparable roles. This is the primary financial argument for Canadians in tech considering US relocation. However, the US tax burden is not dramatically lower for most income levels, and the healthcare cost difference can be $100–$20,000/year — partially offsetting the salary premium.
Neither country is definitively cheaper for all situations. The honest comparison:
For most Canadians earning in CAD, Canada offers a reasonable overall value proposition. For those with the ability to earn in USD while living in Canada (US-remote-work visa holders or US company contractors), the combination of Canadian healthcare and US wages is arguably the best financial position available to North Americans.
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