Best Place to live in Canada : 2011 edition.

Hi people!

As every year here is the annual survey of moneysense magazine regarding the best city to live in Canada.

Of course it's a bunch of statistics analysed by experts and adding a touch of real life. So for those who still not immigrating to Canada or willing to do in the next future, or also the one who are living here (immigrant or Canadian themselves) and want to change for a bset place, this is for you:




In a country as large and diverse as Canada, it's only natural for comparisons to be drawn between cities. Which is more livable, Edmonton or Halifax? Is Vancouver better than Calgary for raising a family? Which city is best for retirees?

This is what drives us at MoneySense magazine to publish our Canada's Best Places to Live list. We look at empirical, objective criteria such as housing affordability, incomes, job prospects, crime rates and access to health care. Even weather is taken into account. Information is taken from the Census etropolitan Areas, Census Agglomeration and Statistics Canada.

We include every community with a population of more than 10,000 people — 180 cities and towns in all. Each one is ranked in more than 20 different categories for a final figure out of a possible 105 points. The scores are close (we go to four decimal places) and no city is perfect. Only two scored higher than 70, and just barely.

We don't expect everyone to agree with our findings. What makes a city appealing for one person may make it unlivable for another. We're often asked, “what about the scenery, or the community spirit?” The fact is there are plenty of subjective, intangible criteria that we intentionally leave out of our formulas for the simple reason that they cannot possibly be measured. Our list simply provides a fact-based comparison from which people can make their own decisions on where people would like to live.
Here are the top ten:

#10: Winnipeg, MB
The capital of Manitoba and home to 60% of the province's population slipped one spot from last year. It can boast of low pollution, great public transit and a thriving cultural scene, but crime is above average and the winters can be brutal. However, access to health care is good and unemployment is low.

#9: Repentigny, QC
Celine Dion's hometown just outside of Montreal slipped three spots from last year. On the plus side, low real estate prices and even lower crime rates make Repentigny an attractive place to live. The city ranks 7th in new cars on the road (a measure of prosperity) and has an extensive transit system — a good thing considering it ranks 161st in the ability to walk or bike to work.  However, this is balanced out by easy access to health care.

#8: Edmonton, AB
Alberta's capital cracks the top ten this year, jumping 7 spots thanks to low taxes, high levels of discretionary income and an extensive public transit system. With temperatures sinking lower than 0 degrees C 178 days a year, weather may pose a problem for some. Higher than average housing prices and crime rates also hold the city back from a better score, but scant precipitation, low pollution levels and high household incomes from the recent oil boom balance this out to make Edmonton a great place to live.

#7: Brandon, MB
Manitoba's second largest city kept its spot this year thanks to a stellar unemployment rate (second only to Estavan, SK), low real estate prices and tax rates and clean air. The city has room to improve in terms of crime and household discretionary income, but this is made up by the low number of rainy days and plenty of access to health care.

#6: Fredericton, NB
The New Brunswick capital has a lot going for it, including the 2nd lowest time required to buy a home (after Timmins, ON), very reasonable real estate prices and low unemployment. While the city is suffers from above-average crime rates and cold, rainy weather, this is balanced out by low taxes and healthy household income levels.

#5: St. Albert, AB
This Edmonton suburb gets top marks for low taxes and high household and discretionary income. Throw in low unemployment, a steadily growing population and above-average access to doctors and health care professionals and you've got a very nice place to live. However, St. Albert has room to improve regarding house prices (154th), and you can forget about walking or biking to work (163rd).

#4: Kingston, ON
The former capital of the united Canadas has slipped two places from last year, but only by one point. Kingston ranks 12th for walking or biking to work, and is above average in almost all criteria save for pollution (116th) and the number of new cars on the road (107th). Kingstonians have some of the best access to healthcare in the country, ranking 2nd in doctors per 1000 people and 13th in the percentage of health professionals.

#3.  Burlington, ON
This southern Ontario suburb remains in third spot this year thanks mainly to low taxes and high household and discretionary income. It has room to improve in terms of real estate prices (ranked 157th) but that's the price to pay for the second lowest overall crime rate in the country after Caledon, ON.

#2: Victoria, B.C.
The temperate B.C. capital has jumped six spots from last year, thanks to low provincial income and sales taxes, low pollution and a steady job market. Plus, it ranks 5th overall for Victorians' ability to walk or bike to work. While Victoria suffers from high real estate prices (it came in 170th out of 180), it cracked the top ten list for both culture and number of days per year above 0 degrees.

And the winner is …

For the second year in a row, Ottawa-Gatineau takes the top spot in our rankings. What does it have that other cities don't? In a word, consistency. It does not rank particularly high in any individual category but it comes in above average across the board. It has jobs, accessible doctors, low crime, and household incomes and real estate are not drastically misaligned. There is a wealth of museums and galleries keep the culture-lover occupied, and the hostile winters are balanced out by beautiful summers.

Source:
http://www.moneysense.ca/2011/03/29/bes … live-2011/

Top ten cities
1.Ottawa-Gatineau
2.Victoria
3.Burlington
4.Kingston
5.St. Albert
6.Fredericton
7.Brandon
8.Edmonton
9.Repentigny
10.Winnipeg

Hello Abdel,

As usual Abdel :one thanks for your contribution!

Thank you YUD,

Could you please take out the 2010 edition and change it with this new edition 2011.

I mean to put this message as a STICKY.

Thanks

I live in Fredericton (#6 on the list) and have also lived in Ottawa (#1) for several years. Both cities are amazing, charming, active places with wonderful arts and culture. They're clean, safe and have a reasonable (if not low) cost of living compared with many others. Both cities have fantastic art galleries, in fact Fredericton has one of the nicest galleries in Canada.

If you like government towns and civil servant lifestyles, these two cities are the most perfect examples I could ever come up with. It's interesting that four of the ten cities on the list are capitals, two are a suburbs of a capital city and one is a former capital city.

Beautiful Abdel, great post. Appreciable.
Agree, Canada is really beautiful to live in.

Great Info, but the BC is on top 5 for the worlds best place to live..

honeyclotte wrote:

Great Info, but the BC is on top 5 for the worlds best place to live..


Hi Honeyclotte,

It depends on the criterias that you are talking about.

If you are talking about the geographcial place, yes indeed Vancouver IS one the best places.

If you are talking about the beauty of nature ys absoluteley Vancouver IS one the best places.

If you are talking about the way of life (for a person who has a big high-calibre job with a very consistent salary)... oh yessss Vancouver IS one the best places.

However, and in order to be objective with a dose of fair analysis, if we talk about rent, crime, cost of life... hummmm Vancouver is far far away about being the best places to live in.

Every survey and studies has its own criteria, so for having a best view, it's better to take a look at those criterias then to see for our own perspective for having a best opinion.

Thanks a lot for everybody for your point of view.

Oh well okey, I love every place in Canada though..Love the longest skating ice rink in Ottawa anyway..Enjoy your life and the privelege to live in Canada.

Thank you Honeyclotte,

Same to you. Enjoy !

Victoria BC is one of my favorite city. Really a very beautiful and exotic place.

thanks for information

Useful information for us, who are willing to migrate to Canada in the next future,  and want to choose the best place to settle in.
Thank you.

vanvouver!!!!!! most amazing place although i am not seen :)

Currently, I live in Sudbury , I try improve my English.  I think it's O.K but just for temporary.
Last month I created a blog, may be you could find some useful informations, and this blog help to improve my English writting skills :P:D
dzgoahead.tk/

Yukon is die beste.

hello Abdel...

Are these ten cities are english-speaking only? I wish to immigrate to Canada, however, my husband understands French only so we are looking for cities which are french-speaking too...

Thank you

Quebec is French.

What a great list! But I'm surprised - Victoria is only #2? I have to confess it's my favourite place in Canada - both to visit and to live. Thanks for putting this together :)

thank you very much abdel you been usful for me and i realy hopfull to live there one day

thanks alot for sharing this useful informations :)

Hello,

Wow, Great information! I completely agree and very natural or attractive places in Canada, I would surely visit it.

Thanks

Thank you for this awesome list. What is the best city to find a job?

"Best place to live" with "Canada" in the same sentence is an oxymoron.

It would be more properly worded: "Least horrible place to live in Canada"

stevewoods wrote:

"Best place to live" with "Canada" in the same sentence is an oxymoron.

It would be more properly worded: "Least horrible place to live in Canada"


Oh boy..I've been hearing this more and more recently, and it's really disappointing.

I've been looking at 2 English speaking nations -Canada & Ireland- and Chile as my future expat locations. But all seem to be down in the dumps. All Irish are moving or want to move to Canada, Canada apparently uses educated expats for low wage labour to prop up native Canadians, & Chile is only useful if you're a wealthy entrepreneur.  :(

So it seems there's no place to go. It's really disturbing how much I've been hearing that Canada's opportunities and quality of life are both exaggerated.

Some honesty would be appreciated. I hear so many contradicting things from the media as well as expats.

I can't understand for the life of me WHY Canada continues to take expats when they damn well know employers won't accept their qualifications because it isn't native, as if Canadians' education system teaches something completely different to everyone else.

Now I'm hearing expats AND native Canadians complain about how unfriendly, undateable, snobby etc Canadians can be.

Maybe the media should say Canada is 1 of the best places to live if you're Canadian & rich, or a privileged expat. 

I don't know what to believe. All I know is that it's next to impossible to get a decent job offer even with a Bachelor's degree.

Very nice post. I wanted to say that I've really enjoyed browsing your posts. In any case I'll be subscribing to your feed and I hope you write again soon!

Thanks,

Ottawa is still the winner of 2012 !