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Pros and Cons of Living in Calgary: An Honest Guide for 2026

Calgary is one of the fastest-growing cities in Canada, and for good reason. It offers strong salaries, no provincial sales tax, a young population, and some of the best mountain access of any major Canadian city. But it also has real drawbacks — weather that can be brutal, urban sprawl that makes car ownership nearly mandatory, and an economy that, for all its strength, remains tied to the energy sector in ways that create cyclical risk. This guide gives you both sides, honestly.


Pros of Living in Calgary

1. No Provincial Income Tax — and No Provincial Sales Tax

Alberta is the only province in Canada with no provincial income tax and no provincial sales tax. For a household earning $150,000 combined, the Alberta advantage over a comparable Ontario or BC income can amount to $5,000–$12,000 per year in take-home pay, depending on income structure. This is the single most underappreciated feature of Calgary's affordability — it doesn't show up in housing price comparisons, but it dramatically affects purchasing power and lifestyle budget.

2. Strong and Diverse Economy

Calgary remains Canada's energy capital, but the economy has diversified meaningfully since the 2014–2016 oil crash. Technology, agribusiness, financial services, and logistics now contribute substantially to the job market. Major employers include Suncor, TC Energy, Enbridge, TELUS, Shaw (now Rogers), and a growing tech ecosystem anchored by organizations like Platform Calgary. Unemployment rates in Calgary are among the lowest of any major Canadian city.

3. Mountain Access Unlike Any Other Major City

Banff National Park is 130 km west. Canmore is 100 km away. Kananaskis Country — with its hiking, skiing, climbing, and camping — begins about 60 km southwest of Calgary. On a clear winter Friday afternoon, you can leave work at 4pm and be on a ski hill within 90 minutes. This is not available to residents of Toronto, Vancouver (without comparable congestion and cost), or any other major Canadian city at Calgary's scale. For outdoor-oriented households, this is frequently cited as the number-one reason they chose Calgary over alternatives.

4. Young, Growing, and Energetic City

Calgary's median age is among the youngest of any Canadian city its size. The population has grown from under 900,000 a decade ago to over 1.3 million in the metro area today, driven by interprovincial migration and international immigration. That growth brings energy, new business development, restaurant and cultural scene expansion, and long-term investment rationale for property owners.

5. Excellent Family Communities with Strong Infrastructure

SE Calgary's lake communities — Mahogany, Auburn Bay, Chaparral — have built-out amenity sets that are genuinely exceptional: private beach clubs, schools within walking distance, extensive pathway networks, and community centres. SW Calgary communities like Evergreen, Heritage Point, and Sundance border Fish Creek Provincial Park and offer mature trees, strong school catchments, and immediate access to one of Canada's largest urban parks. These aren't generic suburbs — they're communities with real design intent and neighbourhood character.

6. Relatively Affordable Compared to Vancouver and Toronto

Calgary's benchmark home price of $568,800 (April 2026) is significantly below Vancouver's ($1.2M-plus) and Greater Toronto's ($1M-plus). The gap is even larger on a purchasing-power basis once the Alberta tax advantage is factored in. For households relocating from BC or Ontario, Calgary frequently feels dramatically more affordable in practice, even when nominal salaries appear similar.

7. Chinook Winds — Winter Relief

Calgary's famous Chinook winds are a warm westerly weather system that can raise temperatures 15–20 degrees Celsius in a matter of hours in the middle of winter. While the rest of the Prairies endures weeks of deep cold, Calgary can have January days reaching 10–15°C. They don't eliminate winter — but they make it considerably more livable than Winnipeg, Edmonton, or Saskatoon.


Cons of Living in Calgary

1. The Weather Is Genuinely Challenging

The Chinooks help, but Calgary's climate is not forgiving. Average January temperatures sit around -10°C, with cold snaps that reach -25°C to -35°C with windchill. Snowfall can arrive as early as September and as late as May. Spring is often short and unpredictable. Hail storms in summer can be severe enough to damage vehicles and roofs — something Calgary homeowners know well and budget for with insurance.

Buyers relocating from BC's Lower Mainland or Ontario's Golden Horseshoe frequently underestimate how materially the weather affects daily life — the clothing costs, the utility bills, the need for winter-rated vehicles, and the psychological weight of long, dark winters.

2. Car Dependency

Outside the inner city, Calgary is built for cars. The LRT (CTrain) serves two lines connecting the NE, NW, Centre City, and SE, and expansion is underway — but most of the communities in this guide (SE lake communities, SW established communities, Chestermere, Okotoks) have limited or no transit options. If you relocate to Mahogany, Cranston, or Chestermere without a reliable vehicle, your daily life will be significantly constrained.

This isn't unique to Calgary among Prairie cities, but it is a real trade-off compared to Vancouver or Toronto's transit networks.

3. Energy-Sector Economic Cyclicality

Calgary's diversification is real, but the energy sector still drives a disproportionate share of the economy. When oil prices drop sharply — as they did in 2014–2016 and temporarily in 2020 — the Calgary job market and real estate market feel it. Property values, which have grown strongly in most years, can stagnate or decline during energy downturns. Buyers who plan to own for five or more years tend to weather these cycles well; buyers with a two- or three-year horizon take on more risk.

4. Urban Sprawl

Calgary continues to expand its urban boundary — new communities are being built at the edges of the city, sometimes 30–40 km from the downtown core. Commutes from the newest areas of SE or SW Calgary can reach 45–60 minutes in rush hour traffic. Infrastructure — roads, schools, transit — sometimes lags the pace of new development, creating growing pains in emerging communities that buyers should ask about before purchasing a new build.

5. The Apartment Market Is Oversupplied

For condo investors or buyers prioritizing resale liquidity in the condo segment, Calgary's current market presents real risk. Apartment inventory sits at 4.4 months of supply as of April 2026, with prices down 8.9% year-over-year and sales volume down 27% annually. This is a buyer's-market segment, which is good news if you're purchasing a condo for yourself — but concerning if you're counting on short- to mid-term appreciation.


Who Should Move to Calgary?

Calgary is a strong fit for:

  • Energy, tech, and professional services workers seeking competitive salaries in a low-tax environment

  • Families who want excellent community infrastructure, strong schools, and space without paying Vancouver or Toronto prices

  • Outdoor enthusiasts — skiers, hikers, cyclists, and climbers for whom proximity to the Rockies is a primary quality-of-life factor

  • Interprovincial movers from BC and Ontario who want to significantly improve their financial position on a similar income

  • First-time buyers who need a market where ownership is still within reach on a single income or a modest combined household income

  • Retirees and downsizers looking for comfortable, connected communities with strong recreation infrastructure and no provincial tax drag on RRSP withdrawals


Who Might Look Elsewhere?

Calgary may not be the right fit for:

  • Households who need robust public transit and don't want to own a vehicle — Calgary's transit network, while improving, doesn't serve most communities outside the inner ring adequately

  • Buyers with a two-to-three-year horizon in the condo segment — the current oversupply makes short-term appreciation unlikely in this property type

  • People who find harsh winters difficult — if Winnipeg's climate sends you south, Calgary's winters, while Chinook-interrupted, will still be a daily reality for five months a year

  • Buyers who need large-city cultural density — Calgary is growing culturally, but it doesn't yet match Vancouver or Toronto in arts, cultural institutions, or ethnic food diversity at the highest level


What Vince DeGiuseppe Observes in This Market

Vince DeGiuseppe has watched Calgary evolve through every cycle since 1992. One consistent pattern: buyers who take the time to match their community to their actual lifestyle — rather than chasing price or hype — end up far more satisfied three years in than those who buy fast on pure financial logic.

The buyers he sees struggling are the ones who bought in a community that doesn't fit how they live — too far from work, wrong school catchment, no community character. The ones who thrive are the ones who knew what they needed before they started shopping.

If you're weighing whether Calgary is the right city for your next chapter, call Vince at 403-830-2839. He will give you an honest read — including the parts that might make you reconsider — because a bad fit isn't good for anyone.


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