What changes when you move from the GTA to Coquitlam, Port Moody, or Port Coquitlam — prices, land transfer tax, lawyers vs notaries, and what your Toronto sale buys here.
Ontario-to-BC is one of the biggest interprovincial moves in the country, and the Tri-Cities are a common landing zone for GTA families wanting mountains, milder winters, and a (relatively) similar price point to the GTA. The price shock is smaller than Alberta buyers face; the bigger adjustments are the tax mechanics and the closing process. Here’s the honest comparison.
The short answer
Moving from the Greater Toronto Area to the Tri-Cities, detached prices are broadly comparable to the GTA — but BC’s costs and process differ. You’ll pay a one-time BC Property Transfer Tax (roughly $22,000 on a $1.2M home) instead of Ontario’s land transfer tax; if you sold in the City of Toronto you escape that city’s second municipal land transfer tax; and BC lets you close with a notary or a lawyer rather than requiring a lawyer.
96–99%
Tri-Cities Sale-to-List Ratio
$1.7M
Typical Detached (Tri-Cities)
2,119
Homes Active Right Now
Live figures from current Tri-Cities MLS® data, refreshed weekly. Sale-to-list ratio reflects how close homes are selling to asking — under 100% is a buyer's-market signal.
| Greater Toronto Area | Tri-Cities, BC | |
|---|---|---|
| Detached benchmark (approx) | ~$1.3M–$1.5M GTA | ~$1.25M PoCo → $1.9M+ Port Moody |
| Condo benchmark (approx) | ~$650K–$700K | ~$500K–$700K |
| Land transfer tax on $1.2M | ~$20,500 (Ontario) — double in the City of Toronto | ~$22,000 (BC PTT) |
| Closing professional | Lawyer required | Notary or lawyer |
| Winters | Cold, snowy | Mild, rainy |
| Commute rail | GO Transit | SkyTrain + West Coast Express |
Benchmarks are approximate and move with the market — use the live market strip on each city page for current figures.
| Cost | Where you are now | In BC (Tri-Cities) |
|---|---|---|
| Land transfer tax on a $1.2M home | Ontario LTT ≈ $20,500; roughly double (≈$41,000) inside the City of Toronto because of the municipal LTT | BC Property Transfer Tax ≈ $22,000 One tax in BC — no separate municipal land transfer tax in the Tri-Cities. |
| First-time buyer relief | Ontario + Toronto rebates (up to ~$4,000 + ~$4,475) | BC PTT exemption up to $835K (full), phasing out by $860K; newly-built up to $1.1M Only if you qualify as a first-time buyer / new build. |
| Who closes the deal | Real estate lawyer (required) | Notary public or lawyer BC notaries handle most straightforward residential conveyancing at competitive cost. |
| Foreign-buyer rules | Not applicable to Canadian citizens/PRs | Same — the federal ban and BC’s additional PTT apply only to non-Canadians Interprovincial movers who are citizens or PRs are unaffected. |
Tax figures are current general information — confirm exact amounts with a BC notary or lawyer. Run your own numbers with the property transfer tax calculator and the closing-cost calculator.
For detached homes, the Tri-Cities and the GTA are in broadly the same range — Port Coquitlam can undercut much of the GTA, while Port Moody sits above it. That makes Ontario buyers far more comfortable here than Alberta buyers, who face a steep step up. Where the GTA bites harder is the City of Toronto’s double land transfer tax; the Tri-Cities charge BC’s PTT once, with no municipal equivalent.
Run your specific numbers with the BC property transfer tax calculator before you budget, and read the out-of-province buyer guide for the full BC cost picture.
Two practical differences stand out. First, BC lets you close a straightforward purchase with a notary public, not just a lawyer — often faster and cheaper for a clean residential deal. Second, BC’s standard subject-removal process and the role of the Contract of Purchase and Sale differ in wording from the Ontario APS, though the logic (deposit, conditions, completion, possession) is familiar.
BC’s Property Transfer Tax is paid at completion, calculated by your notary or lawyer and collected through them — budget for it as cash needed to close, on top of your down payment.
Winters are the headline: mild and rainy rather than cold and snowy. The mountains and the inlet are genuinely at your door — Tri-Cities outdoor access is a step beyond most of the GTA. Transit is SkyTrain and the West Coast Express rather than the GO/TTC network; Coquitlam and Port Moody have SkyTrain, Port Coquitlam relies on the WCE.
Culturally the Tri-Cities feel suburban-and-outdoorsy rather than big-city — closer to the 905 than to downtown Toronto, with mountains added.
Is it cheaper to buy a house in the Tri-Cities than in Toronto?
For detached homes they’re broadly comparable — Port Coquitlam often undercuts the GTA while Port Moody sits above it. The bigger saving is on land transfer tax if you’re leaving the City of Toronto, which charges a municipal land transfer tax on top of Ontario’s — BC charges its PTT once.
How much is BC property transfer tax compared to Ontario land transfer tax?
On a $1.2M home, BC’s PTT is roughly $22,000. Ontario’s provincial LTT is roughly $20,500 — but inside the City of Toronto a municipal LTT roughly doubles the total to around $41,000. So BC is cheaper than buying in Toronto proper, and similar to buying in the 905.
Do I need a lawyer to buy a home in BC like I did in Ontario?
No — BC allows a notary public or a lawyer to handle conveyancing. For a straightforward residential purchase a notary is common and often cheaper. Complex deals still warrant a lawyer.
Does the foreign-buyer ban affect me if I’m moving from Ontario?
No — the federal ban and BC’s additional property transfer tax apply only to non-Canadians. If you’re a Canadian citizen or permanent resident relocating interprovincially, they don’t apply to you.
What’s the weather like compared to Ontario?
Much milder winters — rain rather than snow and deep cold — and cooler, less humid summers than southern Ontario. The trade-off is a wetter, greyer late-fall-to-spring stretch.
How do people commute to downtown Vancouver from the Tri-Cities?
SkyTrain (Evergreen Line) from Coquitlam and Port Moody runs about 45 minutes to downtown; the West Coast Express offers a fast weekday-peak train from all three cities. It’s a different network from the GTA’s but comparable for commuting.
What should I sort out before moving from Ontario to the Tri-Cities?
Budget for BC’s property transfer tax as cash-to-close, line up a BC notary or lawyer, and work through the relocation checklist. The out-of-province buyer guide covers the BC-specific taxes in full.
Relocating from out of province or across Metro Vancouver? Map out timing, neighbourhoods, and budget with Sebastian — owner-operated, no team handoffs.
Contact SebastianSelling to fund the move? Get a current valuation based on real Tri-Cities sold data.
Free Home ValuationSee what's on the market across Coquitlam, Port Moody, and Port Coquitlam right now.
View Homes for SaleThis page is general information for people relocating to the Tri-Cities, not legal, tax, financial, or immigration advice, and figures are current as of June 2026 and subject to change. Property transfer tax, the foreign-buyer ban, and provincial taxes have specific rules and exemptions — confirm your situation with a BC real estate lawyer or notary, an accountant, or the relevant authority (BC Government) before acting. Sebastian Czarkowski is a licensed REALTOR® (BCFSA). MLS® figures sourced from current Tri-Cities board data.