Nova Scotia (Latin for New Scotland) is a Canadian Maritime province located along the eastern coastline, almost exactly halfway between the equator and the North Pole. Nova Scotia is the second-smallest province in Canada by area at only 55,283 km². Though the area is small, a population of close to 1 million people establishes the province as the second-most densely populated in Canada. Here’s all you need to know about life in Nova Scotia.

The capital city is Halifax and it is technically an island, or rather a series of over 3800 coastal islands, with a mixture of Continental and Maritime climates, which result in cold wet winters, and warm summers.

Salary

$2,433.62

The average salary after tax

per month

3.23%

20 Years fixed rate / 

Mortgage Interest Date

Transportation

$135.00

Monthly Pass

(Regular Price)

$8.00

A single pass fare costs

around.

$0.94

Gasoline in the region

per litre

Leisure

$20.00

Eating Out In an inexpensive

restaurant

$80.00

Eating out for two at

a midrange restaurant

with three course meal

Schooling &

Schooling & University

$135.00

Monthly Pass

Regular Price

$70.00

Eating out for two at

a midrange restaurant

with three course meal

University

$450.00

Preschool (or kindergarden)

per month

$21,125.00

International Primary School

per year

$16,362 - $16,595

University per year

Living Expenses

$700

Rent 1 Bedroom

Apartment

$1,100.00

Rent 3 Bedroom

Apartment

$266,000

Average cost of buying

a home

$200 - $300

Groceries, per person

in a month

$8.00

A single pass fare costs

around.

Utilities

$100

Phone Bills

$192.52

Basic (Electricity, Heating,

cooling, Water, Garbage)

for 85m2 Apartment

 

$100.49

Internet (60 Mbps or more,

Unlimited Data, Cable/ADSL)

$16,500.00

International Primary School

per year

$1,100.00

Rent 3 Bedroom

Apartment

$200 - $300

Groceries, per person

in a month

$0.94

Gasoline in the region

per litre

$12,568 - 15,292

University per year

Nova Scotia is the perfect location to set up your roots, with a high quality of life and low cost of living. The province has some of the lowest housing costs with a brand new home setting you back by approximately $143 000. This is almost half of what you would expect to pay in an area like Ontario or British Columbia.

Nova Scotia’s traditional economy was based on its abundant natural resources, especially its fisheries. Today, the economy is supported by off-shore oil rigs and tourism with over 200,000 cruise ship passengers passing through the capital port of Halifax each year. Nova Scotia has a fast-growing information and technology industry and is the world’s largest exporter of Christmas trees, lobsters and wild berries. This offers immigrants interesting job opportunities in fields including trade and export, fishing and tourism.

The largest ethnic group in Nova Scotia are people of Scottish descent, followed by English, French and Aboriginal. Linguistically speaking, English accounts for 92% of the languages spoken in Nova Scotia, with only 3.44% adopting French and 0.66% speaking Arabic.

Like most provinces in Canada, over half of the people in Nova Scotia follow the Protestant and Catholic faiths, with a large portion of the population choosing to declare no religious affiliation at all.

Nova Scotia has 10 Universities, including Acadia University, Atlantic School of Theology, Cape Breton University, Dalhousie University, Mount Saint Vincent University, NSCAD University, Saint Francis Xavier University, Universitè Sainte-Anne, and University of Kings College, as well as over 90 private commercial collages.