Toronto pays Product Managers 16% more than Singapore at the mid-level band — a median of CA$143k vs S$123k.
Estimates based on public benchmarks and modelled data. How we calculate →
Toronto pays Product Managers a median of CA$143k per year, around 16% more than Singapore's S$123k. That's roughly CA$19k of additional gross base pay every year for the same role at the mid-level band.
The premium narrows once you factor in cost of living, tax, and housing. Singapore often delivers stronger real purchasing power, especially for early-career professionals — and the local market is typically less competitive.
Use the CompVerdict offer checker below to test a specific offer against either city's market. A strong offer sits above the p75; a fair offer lands near the median; below p25 there's a clear case to negotiate.
| Band | Singapore | Toronto | Gap |
|---|---|---|---|
| Junior | S$70k | CA$79k | 13% |
| Mid-level | S$123k | CA$143k | 16% |
| Senior | S$192k | CA$222k | 16% |
Medians shown. Gap is computed against the lower-paying city at each band.
Knowing the gap is step one. The real question is where your specific offer sits within Singapore's or Toronto's range. If your offer is in the bottom 30% for the role and city, there's a strong case to push back.
Use the CompVerdict tool to get your verdict instantly. No signup. You'll also get a ready-to-send negotiation script based on the local market.
Check an offer →Toronto pays more. The median Product Manager salary in Toronto is CA$143k vs S$123k in Singapore — a 16% gap at the mid-level band. Singapore median is S$123k; Toronto median is CA$143k.
At the mid-level (3–5 years experience) band, Toronto pays 16% more than Singapore for Product Managers. The absolute difference is roughly CA$19k per year on the median. Junior and senior bands shift the gap slightly, but the direction is consistent.
Senior Product Managers earn CA$222k median in Toronto vs S$192k in Singapore. Toronto maintains its lead at the senior band, often widening as total comp (equity, bonus) compounds with seniority. Singapore can still close the gap when you adjust for cost of living.
No — these are gross annual base salary figures. Toronto typically has higher living costs alongside its higher pay. To see how either salary translates into rent affordability, use SpendVerdict; for savings potential, use PathVerdict. The headline gap of 16% narrows significantly once you adjust for housing, tax, and lifestyle costs.
Compare Product Managers to other cities
Does the higher salary cover the higher rent? SpendVerdict has the answer.
CityVerdict scores the move across cost, climate, and career.