Please complete your profile to unlock commenting and other important features.

Please select your date of birth for special perks on your birthday. Your username will be your unique profile link and will be publicly used in comments.
MTL Blog Pro

This is a Pro feature.

Time to level up your local game with MTL Blog Pro.

Pro

$5/month

$40/year

  • Everything in the Free plan
  • Ad-free reading and browsing
  • Unlimited access to all content including AI summaries
  • Directly support our local and national reporting and become a Patron
  • Cancel anytime.

quebec income

It's no secret that the cost of living in Quebec has many residents looking for ways to supplement inflation in Canada, whether it be taking on more hours at work, extra jobs or seeking financial aid from the Canada Revenue Agency and Revenu Quebec.

With day-to-day necessities rising in price, many are starting to wonder just how much you need to earn in Quebec to live comfortably, and we've got the answer.

Keep readingShow less

With the cost of living continuing to rise, you may be wondering if your salary is in line with the average income in Quebec. Well, new data has just been released, allowing you to see whether your income falls within the right ballpark — or, perhaps, serving as the motivation you need to finally start that side hustle.

Every month, Statistics Canada publishes its "Payroll employment, earnings and hours, and job vacancies" report, which provides a comprehensive overview of the earnings in each province.

Keep readingShow less

For almost a decade, the Institut de recherche et d'informations socioéconomiques (IRIS) has been calculating how much money you need to earn to "live with dignity" in seven different Quebec cities.

In other words, what sort of income is required to live relatively comfortably in Quebec, well above the poverty line, according to standards set by the Market Basket Measure (MBM), which is used by the government to develop "thresholds of poverty based upon the cost of a basket of food, clothing, shelter, transportation, and other items."

Keep readingShow less

To the surprise of no one, the income a single Montrealer needs to live comfortably rose by 9% between 2022 and 2023. That's according to the Institut de recherche et d’informations socioéconomiques (IRIS), which published the 2023 edition of its sustainable income report on May 3.

The report identifies the minimum-income residents of seven Quebec cities — Gatineau, Montreal, Quebec City, Saguenay, Sept-Îles, Sherbrooke and Trois-Rivières — need to live not just above the poverty line but "with dignity."

Keep readingShow less

What Canada's second-tier cities lack in glamour they make for in affordability. Of Canada's three largest cities, only Montreal makes it onto a new ranking of the top 10 most affordable cities in Canada for first-time homebuyers.

The ranking, by Alberta-based real estate platform Edmonton Homes, is based on an evaluation of average home prices, property taxes and energy costs compared to median incomes. The platform quantified these metrics and gave each city a score out of 60.

Keep readingShow less

Quebecers are making more money. In a February 23 release, the province's Institut de la statistique noted an "unprecedented" increase in the median Quebec employment income in 2021: 9% among 24-to-60-year-olds compared to just 1.8% in 2020.

That brought the median provincewide income to $49,788 in 2021.

Keep readingShow less

A new report breaks down "livable income" thresholds in seven Quebec cities. The study from the Institut de recherche et d’informations socioéconomiques (IRIS) examined the cost of living in Gatineau, Montreal, Quebec City, Saguenay, Sept-Îles, Sherbrooke and Trois-Rivières to determine how much money a household would need after taxes in 2022 to live both above the poverty line and "with dignity" in each urban area.

The IRIS calculated livable incomes for three types of households: a person living alone, a couple with one child in publicly subsidized daycare (a CPE), and a couple with two children in a CPE.

Keep readingShow less

If there are two things most people dislike, it's taxes and paperwork. Thank goodness for accountants, right? But in order to be a good client (or file your taxes yourselves), you're going to need to round up all the necessary forms and receipts that make filing your 2021 taxes possible. Quebecers have to make extra sure they have what they need for both the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) and Revenu Québec.

Here are some of the tax documents, forms and receipts you might need for your 2021 taxes.

Keep readingShow less

A report from the Provincial Employment Roundtable (PERT) released on February 17 shows the unemployment rate for anglophone Quebecers (8.9%) is 2% higher than it is for francophones (6.9%), while the provincial average is 7.2%.

Anglophones have higher jobless rates in 15 of the province's 17 administrative regions, it found, especially in the Capitale Nationale, Abitibi-Témiscamingue, and in Côte-Nord — where their unemployment rate is a whopping 25.5%.

Keep readingShow less

The government is lifting the income requirement for vacant Quebec low-cost housing units with the aim of making them available to more people, particularly seniors, families and people living alone. In a January 26 announcement, the Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing said the rule change takes effect immediately and applies when there is no waitlist for social housing in a given municipality.

According to the Société d'habitation du Québec (SHQ), low-cost housing (HLM) residents' rent and heating costs correspond to 25% of their income.

Keep readingShow less

Canada’s Food Price Report 2022 is out and it offers a pretty unappetizing forecast of grocery costs in the year ahead. The report's authors predict a 5% to 7% overall increase in food prices in 2022.

They say that for a family of four consisting of a man, a woman, a girl and a boy, that could mean $966 more at the grocery store compared to 2021.

Keep readingShow less