Transportation is a big monthly cost — and an easy place to overpay in your first year. Here’s how to get it right.

Public transit

Most cities have monthly passes (roughly $100–$160 depending on the city). If you’re in or near a city core, transit is often cheaper and less stressful than a car for year one.

Your driver’s licence

Several countries (including the USA, UK, France, Germany, South Korea, Japan, and others) have licence-exchange agreements with Canadian provinces — you may be able to swap your licence without a road test. Check your provincial licensing office.

Buying a used car without getting burned

  • Always pull a CARFAX Canada history report before buying.
  • Compare insurance quotes — rates vary widely, and newcomers without Canadian driving history pay more at first.
  • Budget for winter tires ($600–$1,200 installed; mandatory in Quebec) — they’re a safety essential, not a luxury.
Get the full picture. This is one chapter of your first year. The complete guide — in order, with 13 fillable worksheets — is in Your First Year in Canada. And grab the free First-30-Days Checklist + resource hub.

General information, not legal, financial, or immigration advice. Programs and amounts change — verify with official sources before deciding. Current as of 2026.

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *