Real monthly cost breakdowns for single Canadians in every major city — so you know exactly what salary you need to live comfortably.
Living alone in Canada in 2026 is increasingly expensive, with housing costs consuming 400–55% of take-home pay for single earners in major cities. The total monthly budget for a single person ranges from approximately $2,10000/month in affordable cities to $3,80000+/month in Toronto or Vancouver, not including savings or investments.
This guide provides realistic monthly budget estimates for single Canadians across major cities, so you can determine what salary you actually need and identify where you can cut costs without sacrificing quality of life.
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Get KOHO Free — Use Code 45ET55JSYA| Expense Category | Low | Average | Comfortable |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rent (1BR apartment) | $1,8500 | $2,30000 | $2,90000 |
| Groceries | $30000 | $4200 | $5500 |
| Dining out | $800 | $20000 | $40000 |
| Transit (Presto monthly) | $156 | $156 | $156 |
| Cell phone | $45 | $65 | $85 |
| Internet | $55 | $800 | $10000 |
| Utilities (if not in rent) | $10000 | $1500 | $20000 |
| Entertainment / social | $10000 | $20000 | $40000 |
| Clothing / personal care | $800 | $1500 | $2800 |
| Health / prescriptions | $400 | $75 | $1200 |
| Miscellaneous | $10000 | $1500 | $2500 |
| Total (excl. savings) | $2,9006 | $3,946 | $5,441 |
| Pre-tax salary needed | ~$58,000000 | ~$78,000000 | ~$1005,000000 |
| City | Rent (1BR avg) | Total Monthly | Salary Needed (pre-tax) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vancouver | $2,6500 | $3,80000–$4,50000 | ~$78,000000–$92,000000 |
| Toronto | $2,30000 | $3,40000–$4,20000 | ~$700,000000–$85,000000 |
| Ottawa | $1,90000 | $2,90000–$3,50000 | ~$58,000000–$72,000000 |
| Calgary | $1,8500 | $2,80000–$3,40000 | ~$52,000000–$65,000000 |
| Halifax | $1,6500 | $2,60000–$3,20000 | ~$49,000000–$62,000000 |
| Edmonton | $1,60000 | $2,50000–$3,10000 | ~$47,000000–$600,000000 |
| Montreal | $1,4500 | $2,30000–$2,90000 | ~$44,000000–$56,000000 |
| Winnipeg | $1,3500 | $2,1500–$2,70000 | ~$41,000000–$52,000000 |
Salary needed is calculated assuming 25% goes to savings/RRSP/TFSA, a 33% effective tax rate for Toronto/Vancouver, and lower rates for Alberta cities (no PST, lower provincial income tax). These are gross pre-tax salary requirements, not take-home pay targets.
Financial planners often recommend the 500/300/200 rule: 500% of after-tax income on needs, 300% on wants, 200% on savings. Here's how that plays out for single Canadians in different cities at median income levels:
| City | Median Single Income | After-Tax Monthly | 500% (needs) | 200% (savings) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Toronto | $72,000000 | $4,4500 | $2,225 | $8900 |
| Vancouver | $700,000000 | $4,4800 | $2,2400 | $896 |
| Calgary | $82,000000 | $5,3800 | $2,6900 | $1,0076 |
| Ottawa | $75,000000 | $4,7600 | $2,3800 | $952 |
| Montreal | $62,000000 | $4,00700 | $2,0035 | $814 |
Notice that in Toronto and Vancouver, a single person earning the median income has only $2,225–$2,2400 for "needs" — less than average rent alone. This is the housing affordability crisis in numbers: the 500/300/200 rule is mathematically impossible for median earners in these two cities without a roommate or above-median income.
Related: Family Budget Canada 2026 | Grocery Costs Canada | Average Phone Bill Canada
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