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Income by postal code: Mapping Canada’s richest and poorest neighbourhoods

Patterns of wealth and poverty on maps are often the key to interpreting patterns on other maps. Murder sites of male homicide victims in Toronto, for example, follow the classic checkmark shape of the city’s low-income neighbourhoods. Using Google’s Fusion Tables mapping tool, we are able to map income across the country in 1,576 postal areas. Scroll down for interactive maps.

READ MORE: Explore our detailed census tract-based income maps. Which neigbourhoods are getting richer, and which poorer?

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Vancouver and Victoria

In the Lower Mainland, some of the richer areas include West Point Grey and other neighbourhoods bordering the University Endowment Lands, as well as large parts of North and West Vancouver. Poorer areas are along East Hastings, in the Strathcona and Downtown Eastside neighbourhoods, as well as part of Burnaby. The FSA which includes the Downtown Eastside has a median family income of just $36,779 – nearly $30,000 less than the Canadian median. – Leslie Young, globalnews.ca

FSA income map: Vancouver »

FSA income map: Vancouver

Maritimes

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Outside major cities (especially Halifax) the Maritimes are consistently low-income, a pattern we also see in Newfoundland proper (below).

FSA income map: Maritimes »

FSA income map: Maritimes

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South-central Ontario

This map shows the wealth of the Golden Horseshoe, generally, with low-income pockets in inner-city Hamilton, parts of Toronto’s west end and Scarborough, and downtown Kitchener.

FSA income map: South-central Ontario »

FSA income map: South-central Ontario

Prairies

The data shows the stark differences in wealth between Alberta, on the one hand, and Manitoba and Saskatchewan on the other.

FSA income map: Prairies »

FSA income map: Prairies

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Greater Montreal

The highest income earners live off the island of Montreal, mostly on the South Shore and West end. Residents on the island, particularly older parts of Montreal North, earn under $50,000 per year. – Aalia Adam, Global Montreal
FSA income map: Montreal »

FSA income map: Montreal

Newfoundland and Labrador

Newfoundland postal codes outside St. John’s are uniformly poor, but Labrador’s resource-based economy shows up as a bright spot on the map.

FSA income map: Newfoundland and Labrador »

FSA income map: Newfoundland and Labrador

Greater Winnipeg

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Winnipeg’s southwest, including newer developments such as Whyte Ridge and established neighbourhoods in Tuxedo and River Heights, show consistently high incomes, while the core area is inhabited predominantly by poorer residents of the city. – Lara Schroeder, Global Winnipeg

FSA income map: Winnipeg »

FSA income map: Winnipeg

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