Is Calgary an affordable place to live? A typical resident spends around 39.2% of income on rent and 16.6% on food. That leaves approximately 44.3% of income available for savings and daily expenses.
The Urban Stress Index (USI) provides a structured way to evaluate cost-of-living pressure in Calgary. By combining housing and essential food costs, it highlights how much income is required to maintain a basic standard of living relative to local wages.
| Item | Monthly | % of Income |
|---|---|---|
| Income | 3,928 | — |
| Rent (1BR) | 1,539 | 39.2% |
| Essential Food | 650 | 16.6% |
| Remaining | 1,739 | 44.3% |
Use our cost of living calculator to estimate your own disposable income in Calgary.
Calgary records a USI of 55.73, which still places it in the extreme category, but it does so in a very different way from Vancouver or Toronto. This is one of the clearest examples in Canada of a city where stronger wages partially offset housing pressure, yet not enough to restore real affordability. Rent absorbs about 39.2% of a typical monthly gross income, which is clearly lower than in the country’s worst markets, but food still takes another 16.6%. That food share is crucial. Even though Calgary’s housing burden is meaningfully below Vancouver, Toronto, or Ottawa, the city still remains structurally tight because essential food costs continue to take a large slice of income. Calgary is therefore best understood as a wage-supported but still high-pressure city: not broken in the same way as Canada’s most severe housing markets, but still too compressed to count as comfortably affordable.
The city’s economic structure explains why Calgary performs better than much of urban Canada without escaping the broader national squeeze. Energy, engineering, logistics, professional services, finance linked to the resource economy, and corporate functions all provide stronger average income support than many Canadian metros can offer. That gives Calgary more resilience than Montreal or Halifax, and it also helps explain why the city sits below Ottawa, Toronto, and Vancouver on the USI scale. But wage strength alone is no longer enough. Once housing moves upward and food remains expensive, even an energy-linked city with relatively strong salaries can stay in the extreme zone. In that sense, Calgary shows the limit of income support under Canada’s current affordability structure.
Within Canada, Calgary occupies a distinctive position. It is less stressed than Vancouver, Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal, and Halifax, but still clearly more burdened than Winnipeg, Quebec City, or Edmonton. That makes it one of the most revealing Canadian comparisons. If even Calgary, with its relatively strong wage base, still reaches a USI above 55, then the national affordability problem is not confined to weak-income cities. It also affects places with decent earnings once housing and food both remain elevated. Calgary is therefore not “cheap Canada.” It is better-supported Canada, which is a very different thing.
Internationally, Calgary compares more favourably than the biggest Canadian crisis cities, but still worse than many productive interior US metros. It is more strained than Houston and Dallas, even though those cities also sit inside large energy- and business-oriented regional economies. It is likewise well above cities such as Denver or Seattle. This is why Calgary matters in your framework: it shows that Canada’s affordability problem persists even where wages are relatively healthy. Overall, Calgary is a housing-led city with significant food pressure and partial income support. The economy is strong enough to soften the burden, but not strong enough to transform the city into a genuinely comfortable one. That keeps Calgary in the extreme tier, even if it remains one of the more functional large-city cases in Canada.
The Urban Stress Index (USI) measures how much of a typical income is spent on housing and essential food.
USI = Housing burden + Food cost share.
See full methodology here.
Income data for Canadian cities are based on Statistics Canada’s Distribution of employment income of individuals by sex and work activity, Canada, provinces and selected census metropolitan areas, using the series for All persons with employment income. Since these figures are reported in 2023 constant dollars, they are adjusted using the Consumer Price Index (CPI) from the Bank of Canada to better reflect recent monthly income levels.
Rental data are based on the rentals.ca National Rent Report, using municipality-level advertised rents as the housing benchmark for each city.
Food cost estimates use Numbeo’s Meal at an Inexpensive Restaurant price as a standardized essential meal-cost proxy.
For full explanation of assumptions, see the Methodology and Sources pages.
Other cities in Canada:
Cities with similar affordability outside Canada: