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Coquitlam vs. Port Moody vs. Port Coquitlam: A Mover's Comparison

February 5, 2026 7 min read Urbance Team
Coquitlam neighbourhood with mountain backdrop — comparing Coquitlam, Port Moody, and Port Coquitlam for people moving to the Tri-Cities area
The Tri-Cities — Coquitlam, Port Moody, and Port Coquitlam — each offer distinct personalities, housing types, and tradeoffs that are worth understanding before you move.

The Tri-Cities area — Coquitlam, Port Moody, and Port Coquitlam (affectionately called "PoCo" by residents) — is one of the most popular destination areas for people relocating from Vancouver and Burnaby who want more space, lower prices, and access to nature without leaving Metro Vancouver's transit network.

But choosing between the three cities is genuinely complicated. They share a border and overlapping postal codes, yet they have meaningfully different characters, price points, amenities, and commute profiles. This guide breaks down what each city is actually like — for someone deciding where in the Tri-Cities to land.

Coquitlam: The Largest, Most Urban of the Three

With a population over 160,000, Coquitlam is by far the largest of the three cities. It's also the most urban — the Coquitlam Centre area and the Lincoln and Lafarge Lake-Douglas SkyTrain stations have created a dense, walkable urban core that didn't exist a decade ago.

Who moves to Coquitlam

Coquitlam attracts a broad demographic: young families priced out of Burnaby seeking detached home ownership, transit-dependent professionals who need Evergreen Line access, and renters looking for more square footage for their dollar than Vancouver or Burnaby offer.

Housing in Coquitlam

Commute from Coquitlam

The Evergreen Extension of the Millennium Line connects Coquitlam Centre to Burnaby, Commercial/Broadway, and downtown Vancouver. From Coquitlam Centre Station to downtown Vancouver: approximately 40–45 minutes by SkyTrain. Car commute to downtown during peak hours: 45–70 minutes.

Port Moody: The Premium Pocket

Port Moody is the smallest of the three cities by land area and population — and it's consistently rated as one of the most desirable cities in Metro Vancouver to live in. It sits on the eastern end of Burrard Inlet, surrounded by mountains and forest, with a distinct small-city character that its residents fiercely protect.

Port Moody character: Port Moody has an active arts scene (the Inlet Theatre, multiple galleries), the most craft breweries per capita in Metro Vancouver, and Rocky Point Park — a destination park on the inlet with a pier, trails, and mountain views that makes residents never want to leave.

Who moves to Port Moody

Port Moody attracts buyers and renters who prioritize quality of life, natural surroundings, and community feel over urban convenience. It's popular with professionals in their 30s–40s, outdoor enthusiasts (the Burrard Inlet trails are world-class), and people who want the feel of a small town with Metro Vancouver commute access.

Housing in Port Moody

Commute from Port Moody

Port Moody has two SkyTrain stations (Inlet Centre and Moody Centre) plus the Westcoast Express commuter rail. SkyTrain to downtown Vancouver: approximately 45–50 minutes. The Westcoast Express (morning-only peak direction) to Waterfront: approximately 40 minutes, but limited schedule.

Moving crew loading truck for a Tri-Cities relocation — Coquitlam, Port Moody, Port Coquitlam moving services from Urbance
Urbance moving crews are familiar with the Tri-Cities' varied housing stock — from Burke Mountain townhouses to Port Moody character homes to PoCo detached neighbourhoods.

Port Coquitlam: The Best Value of the Three

Port Coquitlam (PoCo) is often the destination for buyers and renters who've been priced out of Coquitlam or Port Moody and are looking for detached homes at relatively lower prices. It has a quieter, more suburban character than its neighbours — less transit infrastructure, more driving-oriented, but with good access to the Pitt River area, Traboulay Trail, and Minnekhada Regional Park.

Who moves to Port Coquitlam

Port Coquitlam attracts families with children who want a detached home with a yard, people who drive to work and prioritize parking over transit access, and buyers who want the most house per dollar in the Tri-Cities area.

Housing in Port Coquitlam

Commute from Port Coquitlam

Port Coquitlam is the weakest of the three for transit-dependent commuters. The Port Coquitlam Westcoast Express station is the primary transit hub, but the schedule is limited. Most PoCo residents drive. Bus connections to Coquitlam Station exist but are slow. Budget 60–80 minutes for a peak-hour transit commute to downtown Vancouver.

Moving to the Tri-Cities?

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Side-by-Side Comparison

A quick reference summary for anyone making the decision:

Whichever city you choose, the Tri-Cities as a whole offers a quality of life that's genuinely excellent for Metro Vancouver — more space, more nature, and a slower pace than Vancouver or Burnaby, at a price point that still allows homeownership for many households who've been priced out of the westside.


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