
The Cost of Living in Burlington in 2025: Rent, Real Estate, and Daily Expenses Explained
Introduction: Welcome to Burlington, 2025 Edition 🌟
Moving to Burlington in 2025? You’re stepping into one of the GTA’s most dynamic, lakefront communities—where suburban calm meets cosmopolitan flair. As your local real estate broker, I'll guide you through what it costs to live here today: from rent and groceries to transit, utilities, taxes—and even your nightly dinner out.
By the end of this post, you’ll know not just how much you need to earn, but exactly what monthly and annual budgets look like—whether you’re a first-time condo buyer, downsizing retiree, growing family, or urban-commuter.
1. Housing: Rents, Prices & Market Trends
1.1 Rental Market Snapshot
Average rent across all unit types hovers between C$2,400–2,570/month, depending on the source:
Zumper (June 2025): C$2,400, up 23 % above the national average (professionalmover.ca, zumper.com)
Zillow (July 1, 2025): C$2,570, down C$225 year-over-year (zillow.com)
Unit-level breakdown (July 2025, Apartments.com):
Unit Type - Avg Rent - Sq Ft
Studio - C$1,642 - ~593
1‑bedroom - C$2,070 - ~765
2‑bedroom - C$2,480 - ~1,010
3‑bedroom - C$2,930 - ~1,300
Changes: Rents have decreased ~1.8 % on Apartments.com ; Zillow shows a drop of C$225 YOY . This signals softening—but high baseline.
Neighborhoods: Burlington Southwest & Aldershot show both affordability and high inventory (apartments.com).
1.2 Buying & Ownership Costs
Average unit price: Recent data show that 2‑bedroom apartments sell around C$6,300/m² in suburbs—versus ~C$38,700/m² downtown cores .
Average owned‑housing cost: C$2,678/month, factoring mortgage, taxes and utilities (careerbeacon.com).
Market forecast: Home values projected to continue ~3 % annual growth through 2027; homes to breach C$1 M (professionalmover.ca).
1.3 Rental Rules & Dynamics
Rent control: Post‑2018 rentals (new builds, suites) are exempt; inflation guidelines set max increase at 2.5 % for 2025 .
Rental velocity: All-beds availability ~185 units on Zillow—market is warm (zillow.com).
2. Monthly Budget Breakdown (Sample Single Renter)
Let's model a 30‑year-old single professional renting a 1‑bedroom (~C$2,070/month):
Category - Monthly Cost
Rent (1‑bedroom) - C$2,070
Utilities & Internet - C$200–250
Groceries - C$400–500
Transit/Transportation - C$100–150
Dining & Social - C$300–400
Fitness, Entertainment - C$100–200
Total (essentials) - C$3,170–3,570
This aligns closely with Career Beacon’s estimate of ~C$4,000/month for a renter (apartments.com, rentals.ca, careerbeacon.com) (utilities, health, entertainment, savings).
2.1 Utilities & Internet
Plan for C$150–200/month covering electricity, water, heating, and broadband.
2.2 Groceries & Everyday Goods
Burlington is roughly 3 % cheaper for groceries, but 3 % more for restaurants than average Canada (careerbeacon.com, mylifeelsewhere.com).
For groceries, budget C$400–500 monthly.
2.3 Dining Out & Social Life
Restaurant costs are ~3 % higher; average dine-in still reasonable.
Allow C$300–400/month if dining out 8–12 times.
2.4 Fitness & Entertainment
From cinema to fitness clubs (~C$60–63/month) (numbeo.com).
Planning C$100–200/month is realistic for classes, shows, activities.
2.5 Transportation
Public transit: Burlington Transit adult fare C$3.50, Presto C$2.75 (en.wikipedia.org).
Commuting: Driving costs down mid‑2025 due to Highway 407 tolls removal (en.wikipedia.org).
GO transit: Well-connected to Oakville, Hamilton, Toronto.
Allow C$100–150/month for regular commuting.
3. Household & Family Scenarios
3.1 Couple or Shared
Two renters in a two-bedroom (~C$2,480/m); split plus shared utilities lowers individual cost.
Per-person total: C$2,000–2,300/month for essentials.
3.2 Families with Children
Rent/own: 3‑4 bedroom rental C$3,300–4,500; ownership monthly C$3,000+ (www03.cmhc-schl.gc.ca, apartments.com).
Childcare: ~42 % above national childcare costs (mylifeelsewhere.com). Estimate: C$6,000–8,000/month.
3.3 Retirees
Minimal transit; healthcare mostly public; focus on utilities, property tax, local amenities.
4. Income Benchmarks & Affordability
Single renter: With C$2,070 rent, target monthly net income is ~C$6,900 (~C$83,000/year) (apartments.com).
Comfort standard: Career Beacon shows ~C$4,000/mo living cost; Net income for C$110K salary is ~C$6,688/mo (careerbeacon.com).
Provincial: Ontario 1‑bed average rent is ~C$1,912; Burlington rent is ~C$2,400–2,500 .
Rule-of-thumb: Housing cost ≤30 % of net income.
To live alone in Burlington, aim for C$80–110K gross annually.
5. Yearly Trends & Inflation
Rent inflation: Slowed—1.8 % drop locally; Ontario 1‑bed up just 0.99 % year-over-year (takeoff-moving.com).
Projected growth: Overall cost of living estimated to rise ~3 % yearly through 2027 (professionalmover.ca).
Real estate trajectory: Buyer-friendly with still-increasing home values—strategy must adjust accordingly.
6. What to Expect in 2025 (Summary)
Rent levels remain high (~C$2,400–2,600) but showing small declines—tenant’s market emerging.
Ownership costs strong; with anticipated home values > C$1 M, mortgage budgeting must scale.
Fixed costs (utilities, transit) stable; Highway 407 toll removal offers subtle savings.
Lifestyle spending moderate: groceries marginally cheaper; restaurants and entertainment modestly more expensive.
Ottawa tax relief ended Feb 15, 2025; no more GST/HST waivers (professionalmover.ca, en.wikipedia.org, en.wikipedia.org)—plan your discretionary spend accordingly.
7. Strategic Budgeting Tips
Lock in rent now: With softening, negotiating lease terms may yield concessions or landlord flexibility.
Location trade-offs: Uptown vs. lakeside vs. Aldershot—each with different rental/ownership premiums.
Shared vs alone: Co-living lowers per-person cost significantly.
Transit vs driving: Burlington Transit + GO = cost-efficient commute; driving viable post-407 changes.
Expect inflation: Build 3–5 % buffer annually across major expense lines.
Tax & rebate awareness: Monitor provincial/Fed changes; the 2024–25 GST/HST break has expired.
8. Lifestyle & Community Worth
Safety & amenities: 115 parks, waterfront trails, BPAC arts scene, festivals (Ribfest, Sound of Music).
Healthcare: Access via Joseph Brant Hospital; standard Ontario coverage.
Education: Strong K–12 infrastructure with Halton district/ Catholic boards.
Transit network: 16 Burlington Transit routes + GO connectivity (en.wikipedia.org, en.wikipedia.org, en.wikipedia.org).
Active living: Bike lanes, waterfront paths, 9+ golf courses, performing arts—all balanced cost vs value.
9. Takeaway Framework
Choose your path:
Renter? Expect essentials budget ~C$3,200–4,000/month. Income C$80–100K nets comfort and flexibility.
Buying? Prepare for mortgages ~C$3,000+/month on ~C$1M listings. Budget for ancillary costs like insurance, taxes, maintenance.
Family? Factor childcare surcharges (42 % over average), larger living space, schooling and youth recreation.
Simplify: Keep housing <30 % net income, buffer for inflation, add lifestyle buffers, and revisit annually.
10. Conclusion: Is Burlington Worth It?
In short: Yes—but only if prepared. Burlington offers suburban serenity with urban energy—from lakeside trails to thriving arts, transit access to the GTA, and balanced community life. But its attractiveness comes at a cost: living here demands strong financial planning, accurate budgeting, and forecasting.
As the market shifts slightly towards renters and cost pressures plateau, 2025 is an ideal moment to make a strategic entry—whether you're renting, buying, or moving your family.