Toronto

UN & international careers in Toronto, Canada.

Toronto at a Glance Compare with

Considering a career with the UN or another international organization in Canada? This profile covers cost of living and purchasing power, the ICSC hardship classification and human development — so you know what living there really means. For pay by grade, see the Salary & Benefits tab.

Capital
Ottawa
Currency
Dollar (CAD)
Region
North America
Languages
English, French, IU
Area
9,984,670 km²
Calling code
+1
Cost of Living & Purchasing Power
83 / 100 (US = 100)
local spending goes
1.2× as far as in the US
falling · price level vs US, 2016–2025 (91.1 → 83.4)

This is the World Bank price-level index: a whole-economy, national average of consumer prices benchmarked against the United States as a whole (US = 100), from the International Comparison Program. It is a country-level figure — it isn't tied to a specific city or measured against New York. At about 83, everyday prices in Canada are roughly 83% of US levels, so local-currency spending goes about 1.2× as far. (World Bank, 2026.)

How this relates to your UN pay. For internationally-recruited (P / D) staff, the UN's post adjustment — set per duty station against New York, not the US average — is what actually governs your purchasing power. It already prices in local costs (here about 50%), so it isn't added on top of the saving above. For locally-recruited (GS / NO) staff — paid in local currency with no post adjustment — this national index is the more useful lifestyle guide.
How this is measured (World Bank ICP)
Real UN Purchasing Power UNjobnet estimate
103 / 100 (New York = 100)

An internationally-recruited (P / D) staffer's net pay — base salary plus post adjustment — buys about the same against local prices in Canada as it does in New York.

How we work this out. Net-pay index (1 + post adjustment) ÷ local price level, indexed so that New York = 100. Inputs here: post adjustment 50%, World Bank price level 83 (US = 100), New York post adjustment 76%.

A local-economy estimate. Post adjustment is calculated to equalise the cost of an international-staff basket across duty stations, so this extra purchasing power is what you gain by spending on local goods and services rather than imported or international ones (international schooling, for instance). It uses Canada's national price level and its main duty station's post adjustment, so treat it as a guide, not a payslip. A UNjobnet estimate, calculated from UN ICSC post adjustment and World Bank price levels.

Human Development & Society
Very High Human Development
0.939 HDI rank #16 of 193
83
Life expectancy (yrs)
$54,688
GNI / capita
13.9
Mean yrs schooling
15.9
Expected yrs schooling

The UNDP Human Development Index combines health, education and income. Canada is in the very high band — a useful signal of living conditions, services and schooling for staff and accompanying family. UNDP data