Relocation guide
Moving from Edmonton to Prince George
750 km · ~8.5 hours · the route, the housing math, the climate adjustment, and the PG neighbourhoods most Edmonton families end up in.
The route
Hwy 16 west (the Yellowhead) straight through Edson, Hinton, Jasper, and Mount Robson to Prince George. One of the easier long drives in the country.
The housing math
A typical single-family home in Edmonton runs roughly $510,000 (REALTORS Association of Edmonton single-family benchmark, late 2025). The Prince George benchmark is $446,800(BCNREB HPI, February 2026). That’s a difference of approximately $63,200, or about 12% lower.
Real numbers vary by neighbourhood, lot size, and condition. A lakefront cabin out at Tabor Lake doesn’t map to a Vancouver condo any more than a College Heights new-build maps to a Kitsilano craftsman. The benchmark numbers above are the right anchor for back-of-the-envelope math; the right offer on a specific home is what Jason actually gets paid to figure out.
Why families relocate from Edmonton
- Direct Yellowhead corridor. Edmonton to PG is one continuous highway, easier than any other Albertan or coastal route.
- Climate is the closest match to Edmonton of any BC city; relocators don't have to learn a new winter.
- BC residency with similar housing prices. The relocation isn't about saving money on a home, it's about lifestyle and community.
- Mountain access (Mount Robson, McBride, Tete Jaune) is closer from PG than from Edmonton.
The climate adjustment
Very similar to Edmonton. Continental, dry, cold. PG averages slightly more snow per year and slightly warmer overnight lows in winter. Summers are similar in temperature; PG runs a few hours longer in daylight in June and July due to its higher latitude.
PG neighbourhoods to consider
Based on what most Edmonton relocators look for. Each links to a full guide with schools, amenities, and current MLS listings.
Hart Highlands
family-friendly · suburban · quiet
Hart Highlands is a family-oriented neighbourhood in the north Hart area, north of the Nechako River. The streets wind through larger lots with mature trees, and the housing stock ranges from older ranchers to newer two-storey builds. Hart Highlands Elementary is one of the schools parents specifically move here for. Save-On-Foods, Hart Home Hardware, and Hart Highlands Winter Club are close by.
Full guide →
Heritage
newer-homes · planned-community · family-friendly
Heritage is a newer, planned neighbourhood in south Prince George with most homes two-storey builds on similarly-sized lots. That consistency keeps the streetscapes uniform end to end. It draws young families and buyers moving up from a starter home who want newer construction without leaving city limits. Heritage Park sits at the centre and Spruceland Mall is a short drive.
Full guide →
Cranbrook Hill
views · upscale · nature
Cranbrook Hill sits on the west side of Prince George, up high enough that many homes look out over the river valley. Lots are generous, houses tend to be larger, and the landscaping has had decades to fill in. The Cranbrook Hill Greenway runs right through the area, with hikers and cyclists using it year-round. UNBC campus is just next door.
Full guide →
College Heights
family-friendly · university · trails
College Heights is next to the UNBC campus in southwest Prince George. Young families, university staff, and professionals make up most of the area. You get older ranchers and newer builds here, and the price per square foot tends to be lower than comparable homes on the north side. UNBC's trail network and sports facilities are right there for residents to use. Downtown and major shopping are a short drive south, and you skip the bridge commute that the Hart and north-end neighbourhoods deal with.
Full guide →
Birchwood
family-friendly · affordable · established
Birchwood is a well-established residential neighbourhood in the north end of Prince George, in the Hart area just off Austin Road. It offers affordable, family-sized homes close to schools and Hart Highway shopping, with mature trees, quiet streets, and strong community ties. The location makes commuting down the Hart Highway straightforward while keeping residents close to parks and recreation.
Full guide →
Pineview
growing · acreage · newer-homes
Pineview sits south of Prince George along Highway 97. It's one of the newer rural-residential communities in the region, with acreage lots and newer home construction at more accessible price points than the established rural neighborhoods. Highway 97 access is direct, so commute back to town or heading south toward Quesnel both stay straightforward. The area has been growing as Prince George expands south, which means more building supply and slightly better highway services.
Full guide →
More numbers
See the full cost-of-living comparison
Housing is the headline. Property tax, daycare, groceries, utilities, gas, and commute time round out the picture. The full breakdown is on the cost-of-living page. Comparable households relocating from BC’s lower mainland or Okanagan typically see $30K–$60K/year in net household savings, mostly from housing.
Cost of living: PG vs Vancouver vs KelownaTake the 78-neighbourhood guide with you
PDF covering every PG neighbourhood. Useful when you’re weighing options from Edmonton. Sent to your inbox right away.
Comparing other origins?
Each guide breaks down the route, housing math, climate, and recommended PG neighbourhoods for that specific origin city.
Next step
Talk to a Edmonton-to-PG relocation realtor
Jason has worked with Edmonton families relocating to Prince George across buying and selling sides. No pressure, just an honest conversation about the move.