Your comprehensive guide to relocating to Calgary, Alberta — from finding a neighbourhood and a job to understanding Alberta's massive tax advantages and setting up your finances.
Calgary is one of Canada's most dynamic cities — young, affluent, entrepreneurial, and growing. As Canada's corporate headquarters capital outside Toronto (home to major oil companies, banks, and an expanding tech sector), Calgary offers high salaries, genuine career opportunity, and a lifestyle that blends urban sophistication with unmatched access to the Canadian Rockies. Over 50,000 people moved to the Calgary Economic Region in 2024–25 alone, many from Ontario and BC, drawn by dramatic housing cost savings and Alberta's tax advantages.
Calgary is more expensive than Edmonton but dramatically cheaper than Vancouver or Toronto — and the higher average income offsets much of the difference.
| Expense | Calgary (2026) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Average rent (1BR apartment) | $1,650–$2,100/mo | Beltline 20% premium over suburbs |
| Average rent (2BR apartment) | $2,100–$2,600/mo | vs $2,900+ in Toronto |
| Average detached home | $680K–$720K | vs $1.1M+ in Toronto |
| Property taxes (avg home) | ~$4,800–$6,200/yr | City of Calgary rate |
| Utilities (hydro, gas, water) | $200–$320/mo | Gas costs vary with Alberta prices |
| Groceries (family of 4) | $950–$1,300/mo | No PST on groceries |
| Childcare (full-time infant) | $10–$15/day | Alberta's $10/day childcare program |
| Transit (monthly pass) | $112/mo | CTrain + Calgary Transit bus |
| Car insurance (avg) | $1,700–$2,400/yr | Lower than Ontario |
Land Transfer Tax Advantage: Buying a $700,000 Calgary home saves you $10,475 vs Ontario LTT, and $12,000 vs BC PTT. On a $900,000 home in Mount Royal or Kensington, you save $14,475 vs Ontario. Alberta never charges provincial land transfer tax. Full details: Alberta Land Transfer Tax Guide →
The Beltline is Calgary's most walkable and vibrant neighbourhood — 17th Ave SW restaurants, nightlife, condos from $280K. Kensington for a more residential but still urban feel with the Bow River pathway steps away. Inglewood for the creative, craft brewery, and antique district in the city's oldest commercial area.
Tuscany (northwest) for community spirit, CTrain access, and mountain views. Mahogany (southeast) for the private lake community experience and new construction. Cranston for the Bow River Cranston's Riverstone community. Sage Hill/Nolan Hill (northwest) for newer homes at relatively accessible prices.
Mount Royal / Elbow Park for Calgary's most prestigious heritage addresses. Aspen Woods / Springbank Hill for luxury new construction in the city's southwest with mountain views. Britannia for upscale bungalows near the Elbow River.
Forest Lawn for inner-city affordability with investment potential. Airdrie (30 min north, own city) for new construction at significantly lower prices. Chestermere (east, own city) for lakeside living at lower Calgary prices.
Calgary remains the headquarters city for Canada's oil and gas industry — Suncor, Canadian Natural Resources, Cenovus, Enbridge, TC Energy, and dozens of other major energy companies are headquartered here. The sector has diversified into renewables (Calgary is a hub for Canadian clean energy companies), but traditional oil and gas remains the dominant private sector employer.
ATB Financial is headquartered in Calgary (government-owned, Alberta-focused). Several major Canadian banks have significant western Canadian operations centred in Calgary. The insurance and wealth management sectors are also major employers, with Manulife, Sun Life, and Great-West Life all having substantial Calgary presences.
Calgary's tech sector has grown dramatically. Benevity (tech for corporate social responsibility), Symend (fintech), Neo Financial, and dozens of energy tech companies are Calgary-based. Amazon, Google, and Salesforce have all expanded their Calgary presence. The city's growing startup ecosystem is supported by Platform Calgary and several accelerators.
Calgary's growth means enormous construction demand. PCL Construction, Chandos, Bri-Lin, and hundreds of trades companies are perpetually hiring. Calgary's development industry is one of Canada's most active.
All major Canadian banks (TD, RBC, Scotiabank, CIBC, BMO) have extensive Calgary branch networks. The downtown core, Beltline, and major suburban commercial strips are all well-served. If you're transferring from another province, your existing account transfers seamlessly — just visit a local branch to update your address.
ATB Financial is Calgary's unique banking option — a provincial Crown corporation that operates like a full bank (chequing, savings, mortgages, investments, business banking) but is owned by the Alberta government. ATB has a strong Calgary presence and is particularly valued for small business banking, agricultural lending, and its understanding of Alberta's economic cycles.
Neo Financial is a Calgary-born digital bank that has grown to serve hundreds of thousands of Canadians. Their high-interest savings and no-fee credit card with strong cash back rates make them popular with Calgary's tech-savvy population.
RBC's Newcomer Advantage, Scotiabank's StartRight, and TD's New to Canada programs are all available in Calgary with robust branch support. These programs offer fee-free banking for 1–3 years and credit card access to help build your Canadian credit history.
Open KOHO before you move to Calgary and arrive with a working Canadian bank account. No monthly fees, cash back on groceries and restaurants, and a $100 welcome bonus. Perfect for Calgary newcomers, interprovincial movers, and anyone tired of paying bank fees.
Get $100 Welcome Bonus →Calgary's weather is more variable and often milder than Edmonton's, thanks to the Chinook winds that sweep down from the Rockies. A Chinook can raise Calgary's temperature by 20°C in a matter of hours — January days at 15°C are not unusual in the midst of what should be winter. This makes Calgary more weather-tolerable than Edmonton for many newcomers.
That said, Calgary still has cold winters — average January temperatures around -7°C to -10°C, with cold snaps (though shorter than Edmonton's) reaching -25°C or lower. Unlike Edmonton, snow in Calgary can disappear in a Chinook and return the next week. Calgary has more sunshine than almost any other major Canadian city — 2,400+ hours per year, more than Miami.
Full Alberta tax guide: Alberta Land Transfer Tax — Complete 2026 Guide →