Salary Comparison Calculator Canada — Tax Year 2025
Compare salaries across cities or countries adjusted for cost of living. For Canada. Uses current Tax Year 2025 data.
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Your annual salary in current location
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What you pay now for housing
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Food, transport, utilities, lifestyle
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Expected rent in the new city/country
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Expected other costs in new location
Common questions — Canada
How do I compare salaries across countries with different currencies?
Convert both to a common currency using current exchange rates, then apply cost-of-living adjustments. A ₹1.2 crore salary in Mumbai and a $150,000 salary in San Francisco nominally convert close to each other (at ~₹83/$), but San Francisco's cost of living is 4–5x Mumbai's for rent and 2–3x for food. The Mumbai salary often has better lifestyle purchasing power for an equivalent standard of living.
What is Purchasing Power Parity (PPP)?
PPP adjusts for the fact that the same goods cost different amounts in different countries. $1 in India buys more than $1 in the US in terms of local goods and services. PPP-adjusted GDP per capita for India is about 3–4x higher than nominal GDP per capita in USD, reflecting that local goods are cheaper. For international salary comparisons, PPP gives a fairer picture of real purchasing power.
What costs do people underestimate when relocating?
The visible costs (rent, food) are easy to compare. Easy to miss: health insurance (often employer-provided in India; expensive privately in US/UK), schooling for children (private school costs differ wildly), social costs (entertaining, travel back home for visits), vehicle costs (owning a car is cheaper in India than US or UK), and the psychological cost of being away from support networks.
How do I account for career growth potential in the comparison?
Short-term salary parity matters, but long-term trajectory matters more. A $100k role in a US tech company may have clearer paths to $200k in 3 years than an equivalent Indian role. Consider the exit opportunities a location unlocks — US or UK experience often has optionality value that doesn't show up in current salary calculations. This is a legitimate reason to accept a temporary lifestyle reduction.
What about remittances — sending money home from abroad?
If you're an NRI sending money to India, factor in: (1) forex conversion costs (use Wise or Remitly, avoid bank transfers which charge 2–5%), (2) FEMA regulations on how much you can send, (3) TDS on NRO account interest. Remittances from India to family elsewhere may also need declaration under LRS (Liberalised Remittance Scheme) if above $250,000/year.