cost of living montrealJuly 16, 2026· 5 min read

Cost of Living in Montreal 2026: Real Monthly Budget

What it really costs to live in Montreal in 2026: rent, groceries, transit, and utilities broken down by lifestyle. Real numbers, no guesswork.

Montreal street scene with pedestrians and city buildings

Cost of Living in Montreal 2026: What You Actually Need Per Month

Montreal has a reputation as Canada's affordable big city. That reputation is still deserved — but the numbers have shifted enough that old advice will mislead you. Here is what living in Montreal actually costs in 2026, broken down line by line, with three realistic monthly budgets at the end.

The single biggest lever is housing. An all-inclusive furnished room from C$160/week at Coliville versus an unfurnished apartment plus utilities can swing your monthly total by $700 or more.

Housing: 50–60% of Your Budget

This dominates everything else, so get it right first.

Housing type Monthly What's included
Room in shared apartment $700–$950 Rent only; utilities usually extra
Furnished all-inclusive room C$160–C$205/wk (~$693–$888) Everything: WiFi, hydro, heating, cleaning
Studio downtown $1,400–$1,700 Rent only
1-bedroom downtown ~$1,668 Rent only
2-bedroom (split by 2) $800–$1,000 each Rent only

Rents rose 7.2% in 2025 and the vacancy rate sits at 2.2%, so competition is real. For the full picture on options and neighborhoods, see our Montreal housing guide.

Utilities: $100–$150/month (if not included)

  • Hydro-Québec (electricity + heating): $40–$90/month averaged across the year, but winter months spike hard — a January bill in a poorly insulated apartment can hit $150+.
  • Internet: $50–$80/month for decent speed.
  • Renter's insurance: $15–$25/month, often required by landlords.

Quebec's electricity is among the cheapest in North America, which is the one thing that softens the winter blow. In an all-inclusive room, this entire section is $0 — it is already in your weekly rate.

Food: $300–$500/month

  • Groceries: $250–$400/month cooking for yourself. Jean-Talon and Atwater markets beat supermarkets on produce; Maxi and Super C beat everyone on price.
  • Eating out: a casual meal runs $15–$25, a coffee $3.50–$5. Montreal's restaurant scene is genuinely world-class, and this is where budgets quietly die.
  • The local trick: most restaurants are BYOW (bring your own wine) — alcohol markup disappears, and a dinner out drops by $20+.

Transit: $0–$105/month

  • STM monthly pass: $102.50 regular, $58.75 reduced (students under 25 and seniors).
  • BIXI bike share: $99 for the whole season (April–November) — Montreal is genuinely bikeable and this is the best value in the city.
  • Walking: free, and in the Plateau or downtown, often faster than transit.
  • Car: don't. Parking permits, winter parking bans, insurance, and snow removal make car ownership in central Montreal a $500+/month mistake for most people.

Living close to a metro station is worth more than extra square footage — a point we make in every neighborhood breakdown for a reason.

Phone, Fun, and Everything Else

  • Mobile plan: $35–$60/month. Canadian mobile pricing is genuinely bad; Fizz and Public Mobile are the budget escapes.
  • Gym: $30–$60/month.
  • Entertainment: Montreal's festival calendar (Jazz Fest, Osheaga, Just for Laughs, Nuits d'Afrique) means summer is expensive and winter is cheap. Budget $100–$200/month averaged.
  • Winter gear (one-time): if you are arriving from a warm country, budget $300–$500 for a real parka, boots, and layers. This is not optional. Montreal hits -20°C.

Three Real Monthly Budgets

The Student — ~$1,400/month

Line Cost
Furnished all-inclusive room (C$160/wk) $693
Groceries $280
STM reduced pass $59
Phone $40
Fun $150
Misc $150

Compare against a residence at $1,000–$1,700/month with a mandatory meal plan — details in our student housing guide.

The Young Professional — ~$2,100/month

Line Cost
Furnished room, central (C$205/wk) $888
Groceries + eating out $450
STM pass $103
Phone + gym $100
Fun $300
Savings/misc $250

Living Alone — ~$2,900/month

Line Cost
1-bedroom downtown $1,668
Utilities + internet $140
Groceries + eating out $500
STM pass $103
Phone + gym $100
Fun $300
Misc $100

Plus $2,000–$4,000 upfront to furnish it. The gap between budget one and budget three is almost entirely housing — which is why the housing decision deserves more thought than everything else combined.

Montreal vs. Other Canadian Cities

  • vs. Toronto: 30–40% cheaper on housing, similar on food and transit. The gap is the whole reason people move here.
  • vs. Vancouver: even wider on housing.
  • vs. Quebec City: Montreal is pricier, but salaries and opportunities scale accordingly.

Cost of Living FAQ

How much money do I need to move to Montreal? Plan for first month's rent plus $1,500–$2,000 buffer if you rent furnished (no deposit is legal in Quebec, so you only pay first month). Unfurnished, add $2,000–$4,000 for furniture.

Is $2,000/month enough to live in Montreal? Comfortably, yes — with a room rather than a solo apartment. Solo living at $2,000 is tight but possible outside the core.

What is the biggest hidden cost? Winter. Heating bills, winter clothing, and the way January drives you into paid indoor activities. All-inclusive housing removes the heating half of that.

Do I need a car? No. Montreal is the most transit-and-bike-friendly major city in Canada. A car is a liability here.

The Bottom Line

Montreal remains affordable — but only if the housing line is handled well. Get a room in a good neighborhood with utilities included, use the metro, cook most nights, and $1,400–$2,100/month buys a genuinely good life in one of North America's best cities.

Start with the biggest line item: Coliville — furnished rooms from C$160/week, everything included, no deposit, no furniture run.

Ready to make your move?

Furnished rooms from $800/month. Utilities included. Flexible leases.

Coli

Coliville Assistant

Hi! 👋 I'm Coli, your Coliville assistant. I can help you find the perfect coliving space in Montreal, answer questions about our rooms and properties, or help you book a tour. How can I help you today?