Prices · Schools · Lifestyle · Commute · Sebastian’s honest take · 2026
Both cities are served by the Evergreen SkyTrain line and fall within School District 43. Both attract families, professionals, and investors. The differences are real — and they matter. Here is what sets each city apart.
BC’s fifth largest city at 160,000 residents — the broadest selection of property types in the Tri-Cities (Burke Mountain new homes, Burquitlam condos, Westwood Plateau premium), the most school options in SD43, Coquitlam Centre retail, and access to both the Evergreen and Millennium SkyTrain lines. The city for buyers who want options.
Metro Vancouver’s smallest Tri-Cities city at 36,000 residents — Burrard Inlet waterfront, Rocky Point Park, Brewer’s Row, a tight-knit community identity, and two Evergreen SkyTrain stations. Constrained supply keeps prices higher and values stable. The city for buyers who prioritize lifestyle.
10 factors families and buyers consider most when choosing between these two cities.
| Factor | Coquitlam | Port Moody | Sebastian’s Pick |
|---|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price (2026) | ~$1.05M all types | ~$1.38M all types | Coquitlam (more affordable) |
| Detached Entry Price | ~$1.1M (Harbour Chines) | ~$1.1M (Glenayre) | Tie |
| Condo Entry Price | ~$520K (Burquitlam) | ~$650K (Suter Brook) | Coquitlam |
| SkyTrain Access | 6 stations, 2 lines | 2 stations, Evergreen | Coquitlam (more coverage) |
| School Quality | Centennial AP, Westwood FI | Port Moody Secondary IB | Port Moody (IB unique) |
| Parks & Nature | Mundy Park, Hyde Creek | Rocky Point (waterfront) | Port Moody (waterfront unique) |
| Restaurants & Nightlife | Lougheed Town Centre | Brewer’s Row, Newport Village | Port Moody (boutique feel) |
| Commercial Variety | Coquitlam Centre, Pinetree | Suter Brook only | Coquitlam |
| Family-Friendliness | Burke Mtn, Scott Creek | Heritage Mountain, College Park | Tie |
| Investment Outlook 2026 | Burke Mtn growth + transit | Supply constraint + lifestyle | Tie |
Coquitlam has the widest price range from $520K Burquitlam condos to $1.1M+ Burke Mountain detached. The breadth of supply means buyers at nearly every budget can find a foothold in the city — from a one-bedroom condo near Burquitlam SkyTrain to a new construction townhome on Burke Mountain.
Port Moody’s premium is real — $100K–$200K above comparable Coquitlam properties across most property types. The gap is sharpest in condos: Suter Brook entry-level is approximately $650K versus $520K in Burquitlam. At the detached level, Glenayre and Harbour Chines are more comparable — both around $1.1M — but Port Moody supply is far more constrained, which sustains that price floor even in softer market conditions.
For first-time buyers, Coquitlam is the clear entry-point advantage. For buyers who have already made a lifestyle decision around waterfront, IB schools, or Port Moody’s community identity, the premium is justified by the scarcity of what they are buying.
Coquitlam is practical. More services, more retail, more schools, more property types, and more neighbourhood variety than any other Tri-Cities municipality. Coquitlam Centre anchors the commercial core. Pinetree Way, Westwood Plateau, and Burke Mountain each offer distinct community identities within a single city boundary.
Port Moody is lifestyle. The Burrard Inlet waterfront is genuinely irreplaceable within the Tri-Cities. Rocky Point Park, Brewer’s Row microbreweries, Newport Village, and a tight community of 36,000 residents create a small-city identity that no municipality of 160,000 can replicate.
Neither is objectively better — the right answer depends entirely on which trade-offs your household values more. Buyers who prioritize options and affordability trend toward Coquitlam. Buyers who have already decided on a lifestyle trend toward Port Moody and rarely look back.
Both Coquitlam and Port Moody are served by School District 43 (SD43), one of BC’s strongest public school districts. The quality floor across SD43 is high — this is not a situation where one city has clearly better schools at the elementary level.
Port Moody Secondary’s International Baccalaureate programme is the only IB offering in the Tri-Cities — a genuine differentiator for families who prioritize that credential. IB is rigorous, internationally recognized, and can provide university admission advantages. If IB access is a priority for your household, Port Moody school catchment geography becomes a primary filter in your property search, not an afterthought.
Coquitlam offers AP (Advanced Placement) at Centennial Secondary and strong French immersion at Westwood Elementary. For families who are not IB-specific, Coquitlam’s school coverage is broad and the quality is comparable. Always verify school catchment boundaries at sd43.bc.ca before purchasing.
Coquitlam has multiple SkyTrain options: Lougheed Town Centre connects to both the Evergreen and Millennium lines, offering two routes to downtown. Lincoln, Burquitlam, Lafarge Lake–Douglas, Coquitlam Central, and Moody Centre stations provide coverage across most of the city. The fastest Coquitlam–downtown route takes approximately 40 minutes via Lougheed.
Port Moody’s Moody Centre station provides direct Evergreen Line service to downtown Waterfront Station in approximately 35 minutes — slightly faster than the average Coquitlam ride for transit-adjacent properties. Inlet Centre adds 3–4 minutes.
For car-dependent households, Port Moody’s Barnet Highway is notoriously congested at peak hours — a real consideration that transit proximity does not solve if your destination requires driving. Coquitlam’s Lougheed Highway corridor has more alternative routes and generally better peak-hour predictability.
Port Moody wins on community identity, and it is not close. At 36,000 residents, the city is large enough to support strong amenities — restaurants, arts programming, a waterfront park system, a microbrewery district — but small enough that community associations have real influence, events feel personal, and neighbourhood cohesion is genuine.
Rocky Point events, Brewer’s Row culture, and a waterfront that draws residents regularly rather than occasionally create the kind of social infrastructure that a city of 160,000 cannot replicate at scale. Buyers who move to Port Moody and prioritize community rarely move away from it.
Coquitlam is vibrant, well-resourced, and offers excellent community within its individual neighbourhoods — Burke Mountain, Westwood Plateau, and Scott Creek all have strong local identities. But the city-wide community cohesion that Port Moody produces from its small population is a structural advantage Coquitlam cannot match at its current scale.
If you are a first-time buyer or moving up from a condo: Coquitlam. More entry points, more property types, comparable school quality. Burke Mountain offers new construction with strong long-term fundamentals at a more accessible price point.
If you are a family who has decided on a lifestyle: Port Moody. The IB programme at Port Moody Secondary, Rocky Point waterfront, and tight community identity are genuinely irreplaceable. The premium is justified if those things matter to your household.
If you are an investor: It depends on your thesis. Coquitlam’s Burke Mountain and Burquitlam corridor offers growth-driven upside. Port Moody’s supply constraint supports value preservation. Contact Sebastian for a consultation specific to your situation and timeline.
Which is better to buy in — Coquitlam or Port Moody?
It depends on your priorities. Port Moody offers waterfront lifestyle, the only IB school in the Tri-Cities, and supply-constrained values — at a higher price. Coquitlam offers more variety, more entry points, and broader school options. Contact Sebastian for a tailored consultation.
Which city has better schools — Coquitlam or Port Moody?
Both are served by SD43. Port Moody Secondary has the only IB programme in the Tri-Cities. Coquitlam’s Centennial Secondary offers AP and Westwood Elementary has strong French immersion. If IB is a priority, Port Moody school catchment geography matters to your search.
Is Port Moody more expensive than Coquitlam?
Yes. Port Moody median home price is approximately $1.38M versus Coquitlam’s $1.05M. The gap is most pronounced in condos ($130K–$150K difference). At the detached entry level — Glenayre versus Harbour Chines — the difference is more modest.
Which city has better SkyTrain access?
Coquitlam has more SkyTrain stations (Evergreen and Millennium lines, 6 total). Port Moody has 2 Evergreen stations. For city-wide coverage Coquitlam wins; for a direct commute from the Port Moody core, both offer comparable travel times.
What is better for families — Coquitlam or Port Moody?
Both are excellent. Port Moody’s Heritage Mountain and College Park rank highly for school quality, safety, and community. Coquitlam’s Burke Mountain and Scott Creek are equally strong with broader housing supply. Port Moody’s waterfront lifestyle and tight community identity are meaningful differentiators.
How do I get help choosing between Coquitlam and Port Moody?
Contact Sebastian at hello@sebastianrealestate.ca. He represents buyers in both cities and can model financial and lifestyle trade-offs based on your budget, school priorities, commute needs, and housing preferences.
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Sebastian Czarkowski is a licensed real estate professional registered under the BC Financial Services Authority (BCFSA). All information provided is for general purposes and does not constitute financial, legal, or investment advice. MLS® data sourced from REBGV and FVREB. Always verify market data and listing details directly with the listing brokerage.