Minimum Wage in BC 2026

British Columbia's minimum wage of $17.40/hr is among Canada's highest. See full take-home pay, living wage comparison, and paths to higher wages in BC.

BC Minimum Wage (effective June 1, 2025) $17.40/hr = $36,192/year at 40 hrs/week

2026 Minimum Wage Rates

CategoryRateEffective Date
General Minimum Wage$17.40/hrJune 1, 2025
Liquor Servers$17.40/hrSame as general (2021)
Live-in Camp Leaders$105.58/dayJune 1, 2025
Resident Caretakers (per suite)$41.63/suiteJune 1, 2025
Farm Workers (piece rate)VariesPiece rate rules apply

Annual Income & Take-Home Pay

Hours WorkedGross AnnualEst. Take-Home
20 hrs/week (part-time)$18,096/yr~$16,700/yr ($1,392/mo)
30 hrs/week$27,144/yr~$24,700/yr ($2,058/mo)
40 hrs/week (full-time)$36,192/yr~$31,700/yr ($2,642/mo)
40 hrs/wk + 5 hrs OT (1.5x)$38,934/yr~$34,000/yr ($2,833/mo)

BC minimum wage workers at $36,192/year pay minimal income tax. Federal basic personal amount ($16,129) and BC basic credit reduce taxes significantly. Primary deductions are CPP and EI.

Take-Home Pay Calculator

Minimum wage: $17.4/hr

Estimated Annual Take-Home Pay:

BC Minimum Wage vs. Living Wage

Vancouver and Victoria's living wages far exceed minimum wage. The BC Living Wage for Families campaign calculates what workers need to meet basic needs:

CityLiving Wage (2025)Min. Wage Gap
Metro Vancouver$25.68/hr-$8.28/hr
Victoria$24.29/hr-$6.89/hr
Kelowna$22.75/hr-$5.35/hr
Prince George$19.87/hr-$2.47/hr

Even BC's high minimum wage falls substantially short of what's needed to afford basic housing in Vancouver. Workers in lower-cost BC communities fare relatively better.

Increasing Your Income Above BC Minimum Wage

1. Trades Apprenticeships in BC

BC has major labour shortages in trades. Apprentice electricians, plumbers, and carpenters start at $22–$28/hr and reach $40–$55/hr as journeypeople. BC has apprenticeship tax credits for both employers and apprentices.

2. Tech Industry Entry Points

Vancouver's tech sector offers QA testers, IT support, and junior developer roles starting at $22–$30/hr. BCIT and UBC Extended Learning offer affordable technology certificates.

3. BC Tax Credits for Low-Income Earners

BC's Climate Action Tax Credit pays up to $447/year to low-income individuals. Combined with the federal GST/HST credit, minimum wage earners can receive $900–$1,300/year in tax benefits.

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