Re: any nurses from Calgary? UK nurse needs advise
As a grad nurse, you would be paid $25.56 per hour plus shift differential. Assuming full time employment, alternate weekends and fifty-fifty days and nights, your annual salary would be about $54K. Until you receive your CRNE results and are registered (which should have happened by January!), of course, then everything changes. Your hourly rate would increase to $27.93, with the diffs remaining the same, giving you another $4700 per annum.
Housing prices in Calgary right now are among the highest in the country and the vacancy rate is very low. Depending on how picky you are, you can rent a 2 bedroom apartment or condo for $1000 -$1200 per month or a 3 bedroom for $1300-$1500 or more. I live in a small 3 bedroom bungalow in a suburb of Edmonton; my monthly heating bill on the budget plan is $103 and my electricity costs me about $95. Water and sewer drain about $55 a month. Cable TV/phone/internet costs me another $155. Grocery prices are in the moderate range; I spend about $500 per month on essentials for three adults.
Calgary Transit has a good city-wide bus service and an extensive light rail system. Single adult fares are $2.25 or a sheet of 10 tickets can be purchsed for $19.50. Monthly passes are available and cost $70. If you wish to own a car, purchase prices are lower in Alberta than most other provinces. But nsurance costs are quite high. Gasoline as of this moment in Edmonton is selling for $1.10 per L.
This will give you something to think about....
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