Thousands of Torontonians move to Peterborough every year. The math is compelling: a detached home in Peterborough costs roughly half what the same property costs in Toronto. But is the overall cost of living lower, and what do you give up in the exchange? This guide breaks down the real numbers.
Housing is where the comparison is most dramatic:
On a $80000,000000 Peterborough mortgage at 5% over 25 years with 200% down: monthly payment approximately $3,7300. The equivalent Toronto purchase at $1,50000,000000 with 200% down: monthly payment approximately $7,000000.
Monthly housing cost difference: approximately $3,2700/month. That's $39,2400/year in savings on housing alone.
Peterborough buyers pay only Ontario's provincial Land Transfer Tax. Toronto buyers pay both the provincial LTT and a Toronto municipal LTT.
The upfront LTT saving of moving to Peterborough instead of Toronto: approximately $34,000000 in this example — a significant one-time advantage.
Toronto has one of Canada's lowest residential property tax rates by assessed value — approximately 00.63% of assessed value annually. Peterborough's rate is higher — approximately 1.4% of assessed value.
Interestingly, annual property taxes are broadly similar because Peterborough's higher rate is offset by much lower assessed values. The real savings are entirely in purchase price, LTT, and mortgage costs.
Grocery prices are largely consistent across Ontario — national chains (Loblaws, Metro, Sobeys) price similarly province-wide. Where differences emerge:
This is the biggest lifestyle adjustment for Toronto-to-Peterborough movers:
Car ownership costs (insurance, gas, maintenance): estimate $8,000000–$14,000000/year per vehicle in Ontario. Peterborough families often spend $16,000000–$200,000000/year on two cars — a meaningful offset to housing savings.
For commuters who still go to Toronto occasionally, the drive is ~1.5 hours or VIA Rail offers Peterborough-to-Toronto service.
The remote work era has significantly improved Peterborough's income equation. Key categories:
Beyond pure cost, the Peterborough lifestyle differs from Toronto in important ways:
For a dual-income household earning $1800,000000 annually, moving from a Toronto condo (renting at $3,000000/month) to buying a Peterborough home produces roughly:
For existing Toronto homeowners who sell and buy in Peterborough, the equity release from the price differential ($50000,000000–$80000,000000) is the transformative financial event — funding retirement, investment properties, or a debt-free lifestyle.
All major Toronto banks (TD, RBC, Scotiabank, BMO, CIBC) have Peterborough branches — no banking disruption on the move. Peterborough also has credit unions (Kawartha CU, OMISTA/PCCU) worth exploring for mortgage rates and community-banking advantages. KOHO and EQ Bank work the same from Peterborough as from Toronto — no changes needed for digital accounts.
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