I guess it depends on province but I heard you have high inflation over there. How is it affecting the average person over there?
I guess it depends on province but I heard you have high inflation over there. How is it affecting the average person over there?
https://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/renters-in-36-of-canada-s-largest-cities-can-t-afford-to-buy-a-starter-home-report-1.6451229
FTA: The unaffordable cities:
1- Richmond Hill, ON 2- Oakville, ON 3- Markham, ON 4- Vaughan, ON 5- Richmond, BC 6- Vancouver, BC 7- Toronto, ON 8- Milton, ON 9- Whitby, ON 10- Coquitlam, BC 11- Burlington, ON 12- Brampton, ON 13- Mississauga, ON 14- Burnaby, BC 15- Ajax, ON 16- Surrey, BC 17- Langley, BC 18- Oshawa, ON 19- Saanich, BC 20- Kelowna, BC 21- Abbotsford, BC 22- Guelph, ON 23- Hamilton, ON 24- Waterloo, ON 25- Cambridge, ON 26- Barrie, ON 27- Kitchener, ON 28- Ottawa, ON 29- London, ON 30- St. Catharines, ON 31- Montreal, QC 32- Windsor, ON 33- Kingston, ON 34- Halifax, NS 35- Greater Sudbury, ON 36- Longueuil, QC
And the affordable cities:
1- Edmonton, AB 2- St. John’s, NL 3- Regina, SK 4- Saguenay, QC 5- Trois-Rivières, QC 6- Quebec City, QC 7- Lévis, QC 8- Winnipeg, MB 9- Saskatoon, SK 10- Gatineau, QC 11- Calgary, AB 12- Sherbrook, QC 13- Terrebonne, QC 14- Laval, QC
I bought in Winnipeg. It’s been working for me. :)
Calgary is considered affordable? Good lord. I can’t even afford proper groceries here anymore