BC median household net worth: $773,500 — the highest of any province. See how you compare by age group using a free percentile tool based on Statistics Canada SFS 2023 data.
Last updated: June 2026·Source: Statistics Canada SFS 2023 (11-627-M2024047)
BC Median
$773,500
SFS 2023
Canada Median
$519,700
SFS 2023
BC vs Canada
+49%
above national
#1 Province
BC
by median net worth
Your BC percentile
50th
BC median
$349,000
BC top 25%
$920,000
BC top 10%
$1,712,000
At $349,000 you're in the 50th percentile of BC households aged 35–44.
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Percentiles estimated from SFS 2023 national data scaled by BC provincial factor (1.49×)
Derived from Statistics Canada SFS 2023 national data scaled by BC provincial factor (BC $773,500 ÷ national $519,700 = 1.49×). BC-specific age-band percentile tables are not published in the SFS summary.
| Age | 25th | Median | Mean | 75th | Top 10% |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Under 35 | $13,000 | $73,000 | $227,000 | $294,000 | $692,000 |
| 35–44 | $78,000 | $349,000 | $776,000 | $920,000 | $1,712,000 |
| 45–54 | $175,000 | $776,000 | $1,507,000 | $1,608,000 | $3,125,000 |
| 55–64 | $236,000 | $1,027,000 | $1,947,000 | $2,203,000 | $4,243,000 |
| 65+ | $329,000 | $958,000 | $1,714,000 | $1,950,000 | $3,824,000 |
British Columbia's $773,500 median net worth — 49% above the national median — is almost entirely explained by the Greater Vancouver real estate market. Metro Vancouver detached homes have a benchmark price above $2M; condos in the $700K–$1.2M range. A BC household that purchased in 2010–2015 has seen enormous equity accumulation: a condo bought at $500K is now worth $900K–$1.2M, and a detached home bought at $1M is now $2M–$3M.
Beyond property, BC's tech sector adds significant income: Amazon has 15,000+ employees in Vancouver; Microsoft, Apple, Electronic Arts, and Hootsuite maintain major offices. High-income tech workers accelerate both RRSP and TFSA accumulation. Resource wealth (mining, forestry, LNG) adds another layer for interior BC households.
🏠
Real Estate
Vancouver benchmark detached: ~$2M+. Primary driver of BC's wealth premium.
💻
Tech Sector
Amazon, Microsoft, Apple offices. Above-average salaries accelerate registered savings.
⛏️
Resource Wealth
Mining, forestry, LNG projects contribute to interior BC household balance sheets.
The SFS 2023 national data shows that under-35 family units WITH a principal residence have a median net worth of $457,100 — vs just $44,000 without. In BC, where property values are 49% above the national median, this gap is even more pronounced. A young BC homeowner who bought a Vancouver condo in 2019 at $750K may have $250,000–$350,000 in equity today; a renter the same age with identical income may have $40,000–$80,000 in TFSA and RRSP savings. The wealth divide between homeowners and renters in BC is one of the widest in Canada.
Average Net Worth by Age in Canada →
National SFS 2023 data with all provinces + percentile tool.
Average Net Worth in Ontario →
Ontario median: $665,600. GTA real estate & Bay Street wealth.
Average Net Worth in Alberta →
Alberta median: $457,100. No provincial tax, energy sector dynamics.
Canada Net Worth Tracker →
Track RRSP, TFSA, FHSA, home equity monthly.
The median household net worth in British Columbia is $773,500 (Statistics Canada SFS 2023 infographic, October 29, 2024) — the highest of any province in Canada. The national overall median is $519,700, meaning BC is approximately 49% above the Canadian average. The mean (average) in BC is substantially higher than the median because of wealth concentration at the top end, particularly among Vancouver real estate owners with decades of appreciation.
BC's $773,500 median net worth is primarily driven by the Vancouver real estate market. Greater Vancouver detached homes have a benchmark price around $2M; condos range from $700K–$1.2M. A BC homeowner who bought in 2010 may hold $800,000–$1.5M in home equity alone. Secondary factors include the tech sector (Amazon, Microsoft, Apple, Electronic Arts, Hootsuite all have major Vancouver offices), resource industry wealth, and an influx of high-net-worth residents from Ontario and internationally.
For the 35–44 age group in British Columbia, the estimated median net worth is approximately $349,000 — derived from the SFS 2023 national median of $234,400 scaled by BC's provincial factor (1.49×). The top 10% threshold for this age group in BC is approximately $1.7M. For most BC residents in this age range, home equity is the dominant component. A 35-year-old who purchased a Metro Vancouver condo in 2018–2019 and held it through 2023 may have $300,000–$600,000 in equity alone.
Statistics Canada does not publish Vancouver CMA-specific net worth data in the SFS summary. However, Metro Vancouver's median household net worth is estimated to substantially exceed even BC's provincial median of $773,500, given that Greater Vancouver property prices are approximately 2–3× those of smaller BC communities. Households in West Vancouver and Point Grey — among Canada's wealthiest neighbourhoods — have median net worths estimated in the $3M–$5M+ range. However, renters in the same areas may have net worths well below the BC median.
Yes — Statistics Canada's SFS methodology includes the principal residence at market value (minus outstanding mortgage) in household net worth. For BC households, the principal residence is often the dominant asset. The SFS 2023 highlights that for Canadian family units under 35, those WITH a principal residence have a median of $457,100 vs $44,000 without. In BC, where property prices are higher, this gap is even more pronounced. When financial planners refer to 'investable net worth', they exclude the primary home — a $773,500 BC household may have only $150,000–$200,000 in investable (non-home) assets.
BC ($773,500 median) leads Ontario ($665,600 median) by approximately $107,900 or 16% (SFS 2023). Both provinces far exceed the national median of $519,700. The gap is driven by Vancouver real estate outperforming the GTA in recent years. However, Ontario's larger population means more households overall hold high net worth. For non-homeowners, the provinces are more comparable since the primary home gap disappears.
A reasonable benchmark is the median for your age group in BC: 35–44 ~$349,000; 45–54 ~$776,000; 55–64 ~$1,027,000. Clearing the 75th percentile puts you in the top quarter: 35–44 ~$920,000; 45–54 ~$1.6M; 55–64 ~$2.2M. For retirement planning in Metro Vancouver, ASFA comfortable standard guidelines suggest a retirement portfolio of approximately $1.2M–$1.7M (separate from home equity) for a couple targeting a comfortable standard. The high cost of living in Vancouver means BC FIRE numbers are substantially higher than the national equivalent.
Estimated top 10% (90th percentile) net worth thresholds in British Columbia: Under 35: ~$692,000 | 35–44: ~$1.71M | 45–54: ~$3.13M | 55–64: ~$4.24M | 65+: ~$3.82M. These are derived from SFS 2023 national percentile thresholds scaled by BC's provincial median factor (1.49×). Crossing the top-10% threshold at any age in BC typically requires either a paid-off Metro Vancouver property, a significant investment portfolio, or a combination of both.
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