You can get a lot of information on in the discussion forum.
www.discovervancouver.com
Rent can vary greatly from area to area and the age of the building you are living in. A one bedroom can range from $700 to $1200 a month and most will include heat unless you rent in a house. Hydro for electricity is about $50 - 60 every two months.
Check out
www.shaw.ca
to see cable package prices.
2006-09-24 10:39:50
·
answer #1
·
answered by superrrmodel 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
Expensive, expensive, expensive. My husband and I moved out here from Manitoba 8 years ago and could not believe how much it cost us to live here. We just bought a 3 bedroom townhouse 45 mins. from Vancouver (when there is no traffic, it can take up to 1 1/2 hours to get to Vancouver in rush hour) This townhouse cost us $300,000 and we don't have a yard or a deck. We have our gas and hydro on budget so we pay the same amount every month. Gas is $96.00 a month and hydro is $60.00 a month. Tac on strata fees for the townhouse complex of 190.00 a month. Our car insurance is $156.00 a month with a 40% safe drivers discount. So basically, at this point we are putting out about $2,600.00 a month so far and we still haven't bought gas for the car or food to eat, clothing or even a newspaper or cable TV. BUT aside from that, Vancouver is still worth looking at as a place to live. It may be expensive but there is skiing, beaches, hiking, tons of walks on the seawalls and tons of stuff to see and do that don't cost allot of money. You can't beat the weather (once you get used to the rain) and everytime you look out your window it is like you are on vacation. I would suggest you come out for a vacation and see if the lifestyle is what you want, then you can decide if you want to stay or if you prefer where you are. Good luck.
2006-09-26 16:57:04
·
answer #2
·
answered by icemom4ever 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
Honestly it really depends on your expectations, if you are wanting to live the same way you are now, or prepared to make sacrifices. If you are used to eating out several times a week, its obviously going to cost you more than if you don't. Do you want to live in the city, that's going to cost more than in the suburbs.
Have you thought about making a trip there first and checking things out? I had heard so many people say it's expensive, however we made the trip over and checked it out, only to find, cars are cheaper to buy, house prices are cheaper, eating out is cheaper, rent is about the same, clothes are cheaper. So it really depends on where you are coming from and what you are used to. Good luck
2006-09-24 23:32:47
·
answer #3
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
Very high real estate prices ( probably top 3 most expensive in Canada). Rent is pretty pricey also. check out the Vancouver Sun newspaper - you'll find everything you need to know.
2006-09-26 16:03:14
·
answer #4
·
answered by bcgal 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
of direction you may stay right here. that is what I propose; do no longer make your decision based on residing in Burnaby or New West are extra cost-effective. you may prioritize your self. the reason you're coming right here to bypass to the college your coronary heart desires. in case you gain that objective then come across a place closer on your campus. the generally occurring lease varies counting on which section you reside. in case you reside away out of your campus the cost of residing might bypass bigger considering which you will pay for transit, the two on gasoline or bus bypass. that would make a distinction of ~$one hundred and upto ~ 3 hundred. do no longer %. a condominium purely considering that is $2 hundred extra cost-effective than the single closer on your college considering that distinction would be compensated in transit and the time you will spend to holiday back and forth. you want to paintings section Time so the two %. your housing closer to college or to paintings. i think of you would be waiting to funds your self with a minimum spending of $1500 - in easy terms for foodstuff, lodging and delivery so any funds you spend for different stuff in Ontario may well be comparable in right here, in all probability slightly distinctive. We pay little bit bigger MSP top rate and that i presume in case you sign in your motor bike in right here the ICBC coverage top rate could be distinctive, consistent with probability bigger. If I have been you i might funds myself $2000 a month (supply and take) and then come to a decision. If I lived on the East Coast, i might want to get into McGill college...particular the suburbs of Vancouver is notably. that is an costly city and don't want to disappoint you yet jobs are scarce. in any case, sturdy success consisting of your decision.
2016-10-17 21:49:33
·
answer #5
·
answered by templeman 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
If you have $750,000.00 kicking around you could probably buy an average house. Seriously!
2006-09-24 10:45:11
·
answer #6
·
answered by Star 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
budget for total income after tax..4000.00 per month to live
2006-09-24 16:19:04
·
answer #7
·
answered by Button Face 4
·
0⤊
0⤋