🍁Alberta · SFS 2023

Average Net Worth in
Alberta 2026

Alberta median household net worth: $457,100 — with no provincial income tax, higher disposable income, and lower housing costs than BC or Ontario. Free percentile tool using Statistics Canada SFS 2023 data.

Last updated: June 2026·Source: Statistics Canada SFS 2023 (11-627-M2024047)

AB Median

$457,100

SFS 2023

Canada Median

$519,700

SFS 2023

Provincial Tax

$0

only province with none

Canada rank

#3 Province

by median net worth

How do you rank among Alberta households?

Your AB percentile

50th

AB median

$206,000

AB top 25%

$544,000

AB top 10%

$1,011,000

At $206,000 you're in the 50th percentile of Alberta households aged 35–44.

🔒 Calculated on your device. Nothing leaves your browser.

Percentiles estimated from SFS 2023 national data scaled by Alberta provincial factor (0.88×)

📋 Alberta Net Worth by Age — Estimated from SFS 2023

Derived from Statistics Canada SFS 2023 national data scaled by Alberta provincial factor (AB $457,100 ÷ national $519,700 = 0.88×). Alberta-specific age-band percentile tables are not published in the SFS summary.

Age25thMedianMean75thTop 10%
Under 35$7,700$43,000$134,000$174,000$409,000
35–44$46,000$206,000$458,000$544,000$1,011,000
45–54$104,000$459,000$890,000$950,000$1,847,000
55–64$139,000$607,000$1,150,000$1,301,000$2,507,000
65+$194,000$566,000$1,013,000$1,152,000$2,261,000

Alberta Wealth: High Income, No Tax, Different Math

Alberta's $457,100 median net worth is 12% below the national median — but this understates Alberta's actual wealth accumulation potential. Alberta has the highest median household income in Canada: a Calgary engineer or lawyer earning $180,000 pays approximately $73,200 in combined taxes vs $87,000 in Ontario — a $13,800/year saving. Over 25 years, that saving invested at 7% compounds to over $900,000 in additional net worth.

Alberta's lower net worth median vs BC and Ontario is explained almost entirely by real estate: Calgary detached homes average $720K vs Toronto's $1.5M and Vancouver's $2M+. Alberta households build wealth faster in investable assets (RRSP, TFSA, investments) relative to home equity — a structurally different wealth composition that is arguably more liquid and less correlated with a single asset class.

💰

No Provincial Tax

$5,000–$20,000/yr saved vs BC or Ontario for mid-to-high earners. Compounds significantly.

Energy Sector

Oil, gas, petrochemicals, LNG. High salaries + cyclical risk. Good years accelerate wealth fast.

🏘️

Lower Cost Living

Calgary/Edmonton homes $600K–$720K vs $1.5M+ Toronto/Vancouver. More savings go to investments.

FIRE in Alberta: A Lower Number, Faster to Reach

For Albertans pursuing FIRE (Financial Independence, Retire Early), the calculus differs from BC or Ontario in two key ways: (1) living expenses are lower — a comfortable lifestyle in Calgary or Edmonton costs $60K–$80K/year for a couple vs $90K–$120K+ in Vancouver or Toronto; (2) the no-provincial-tax advantage on RRSP withdrawals in retirement means more after-tax income per dollar withdrawn. A $1.5M Alberta FIRE portfolio (vs $2M–$2.5M in BC or Ontario) provides comparable purchasing power. Alberta RRSP withdrawals above $150K face the 33% federal rate only — no provincial layer on top.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

What is the average net worth in Alberta?

The median household net worth in Alberta is $457,100 (Statistics Canada SFS 2023 infographic, October 29, 2024) — third-highest in Canada after BC ($773,500) and Ontario ($665,600). Alberta is approximately 12% below the national median of $519,700. However, this does not mean Albertans are poorer — Alberta has the highest household incomes in Canada. Lower net worth relative to income reflects lower real estate prices compared to BC and Ontario, meaning less equity accumulation, even though Albertans tend to save more per dollar earned.

How does Alberta's no-provincial-income-tax advantage work?

Alberta is the only province with no provincial income tax. An Albertan earning $150,000 pays a combined federal + provincial rate of approximately 40.7%, compared to 48.3% in Ontario and 49.8% in BC. The annual tax saving for a $150K earner is roughly $11,400–$13,600 vs Ontario or BC. Over 20 years, invested at 7%, that annual saving compounds to approximately $590K–$706K in additional wealth. This tax advantage accelerates RRSP and TFSA accumulation and is a key reason Alberta attracts high-income workers despite lower home prices.

Why is Alberta net worth below BC and Ontario despite high incomes?

The gap is almost entirely explained by real estate prices. BC's median home value (~$1M) and Ontario's (~$800K) have appreciated far more than Alberta's ($600K–$650K across major cities). Home equity is the primary wealth vehicle for most Canadians. An Albertan who bought a Calgary detached home for $500K in 2015 and saw it appreciate to $700K gained $200K — an Ontario buyer who bought for $700K and saw it reach $1.3M gained $600K. Despite identical incomes and savings habits, the Ontario household's net worth grew $400K faster purely from real estate appreciation.

What is the average net worth in Calgary vs Edmonton?

Statistics Canada does not publish city-level net worth data in the SFS summary. However, Calgary households generally have higher net worth than Edmonton households — Calgary is home to more oil-and-gas executives, lawyers, engineers, and financial professionals, while Edmonton has a larger public sector (provincial government, hospitals, universities) at lower average incomes. Median home values also differ: Calgary detached homes average ~$720K vs Edmonton ~$550K. Both cities are well below Vancouver and Toronto, which is why Alberta's provincial median trails BC and Ontario despite income parity.

What is the average net worth of a 45-year-old in Alberta?

For the 45–54 age group in Alberta, the estimated median net worth is approximately $459,000 — derived from SFS 2023 national median of $521,600 scaled by Alberta's provincial factor (0.88×). The top 10% threshold for this age group in Alberta is approximately $1.85M. Alberta 45-year-olds in the energy sector (engineers, geologists, project managers) who bought Calgary homes in 2015 and maximized RRSPs through the oil boom often reach the 75th percentile ($950K) or higher. Those who entered in boom years but faced the 2014–2016 downturn may be closer to the median.

How did the oil price crash affect Alberta net worth?

The 2014–2016 oil price crash and subsequent low-price environment significantly impacted Alberta net worth. Calgary home prices dropped 10–15% from 2014 peaks and stayed flat through 2019. Many oilfield workers and engineers saw income cuts of 20–40%. The SFS 2023 captures data through 2023 — by that point, Calgary real estate had recovered and oil prices stabilized, helping Alberta's median recover. However, households that bought at 2013–2014 Calgary peaks and faced income cuts during the downturn saw flat or declining net worth through much of the 2015–2020 period.

What is a good net worth in Alberta?

A reasonable benchmark is the median for your age group in Alberta: 35–44 ~$206,000; 45–54 ~$459,000; 55–64 ~$607,000. Clearing the 75th percentile puts you in the top quarter: 35–44 ~$544,000; 45–54 ~$950,000; 55–64 ~$1.30M. Alberta's lower cost of living (especially housing vs GTA/Vancouver) means a $1.5M–$2M net worth in Alberta provides a comfortable retirement — broadly equivalent to $2.5M–$3M in Metro Vancouver or Toronto once cost-of-living differences are accounted for.

Should Albertans prioritize RRSP or TFSA given no provincial tax?

Without provincial income tax, Alberta residents have lower marginal rates than other provinces — but RRSP is still powerful for anyone earning above $55,000 (29% federal + 0% provincial at that threshold). For high earners ($120K+), the 33% federal rate alone makes RRSP contributions highly effective. TFSA ($95,000 cumulative room in 2026) is ideal for equities with high capital gains potential or US dividend income (no foreign withholding tax shield in RRSP). Most Alberta financial planners recommend maxing both in alternating years or based on income prediction, rather than choosing one exclusively.

Track your Alberta net worth monthly.

Richify tracks RRSP, TFSA, FHSA, home equity, and your Canadian percentile — all in one place. Free on iOS and Android.

Get Richify free
Get Richify free