Victoria Senior Homes
Find trusted retirement communities and senior care homes in Victoria, BC. Whether you’re searching for independent lifestyles or higher levels of support, our directory connects you with dependable options.
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The Victorian at McKenzie
4000 Douglas St, Victoria, BC V8X 5K5, Canada
The Victorian at McKenzie in Victoria, BC offers independent living and respite care with chef-prepared meals, beautiful gardens, and a full social calendar.
The Wellesley
2800 Blanshard St, Victoria, BC V8T 5B5, Canada
The Wellesley in Victoria, BC offers Independent Living, Assisted Living, Long-Term Care, and Respite Care in a vibrant, centrally located community.
The Wexford - A Bria Seniors Community
1737 56 St, Delta, BC V4L 0A5, Canada
The Wexford offers upscale, all-inclusive independent senior living in sunny Tsawwassen, BC, blending boutique hotel charm with a vibrant, supportive community.
Venvi Parkwood Manor
1142 Dufferin St, Coquitlam, BC V3B 6V4, Canada
Venvi Parkwood Manor in Coquitlam offers independent senior living in a peaceful parkland setting, with engaging amenities and a supportive community.
Veterans Memorial Lodge
4579 Chatterton Way, Victoria, BC V8X 4Y7, Canada
Veterans Memorial Lodge in Victoria, BC provides long-term, memory, respite, and palliative care for seniors and veterans in a welcoming Broadmead neighbourhood setting.
Victoria Chinatown Care Centre
555 Herald St, Victoria, BC V8W 1S5, Canada
Victoria Chinatown Care Centre is a non-profit, accredited long-term care facility in Victoriaβs Chinatown, offering a supportive home and engaging activities for seniors.
Victoria Heights
230 Ross Dr, New Westminster, BC V3L 0B1, Canada
Victoria Heights in New Westminster, BC provides a full continuum of care including Independent Living, Assisted Living, Memory Care, and Long-Term Care with round-the-clock support.
Learn More About senior Care in Victoria
Victoria has more seniors per capita than almost any other major city in Canada, and that is not an accident. The city has been drawing retirees for generations, built on a reputation for mild weather, walkable neighbourhoods, and a pace of life that suits people who have stopped measuring their days in commutes and quarterly targets. Nearly one in four residents of the greater Victoria area is over 65, and the city’s senior living market has grown up around that reality with a depth and range of options that few Canadian cities of comparable size can match.
The city sits on the southern tip of Vancouver Island, which gives it a geography worth understanding when searching for senior homes. Victoria proper is a compact, walkable city, but the greater Victoria region spans multiple municipalities including Saanich, Oak Bay, Esquimalt, Langford, and Colwood, each with its own character and density of senior living options. Families often find themselves considering residences across several of these communities rather than just within the city boundaries. The transit network connects most of them, and many of the region’s senior homes are within reach of bus routes that run regularly into the downtown core.
Senior care on Vancouver Island is overseen by Island Health, the regional health authority covering Victoria and the broader island. Like all BC health authorities, Island Health administers publicly funded residential care placements under the Community Care and Assisted Living Act. A needs assessment through Island Health determines eligibility and priority for publicly funded care, while private pay residences can be accessed directly without a referral. Victoria’s well-established senior living market means both streams have meaningful options available.
Getting to and from Victoria is worth thinking about for families living on the mainland. There is no bridge or tunnel connecting Vancouver Island to the rest of BC. The primary connection is BC Ferries, with the Swartz Bay to Tsawwassen route running multiple times daily. Families flying in use Victoria International Airport, which offers direct flights to Vancouver, Calgary, Toronto, and select US cities. These logistics are worth factoring in when families are weighing whether a parent in Victoria is close enough for regular visits.
Victoria’s climate is legitimately one of the mildest in Canada. Winters are wet but rarely cold, snow is uncommon in the city itself, and the summer months are reliably warm and dry. For seniors and families considering a move from harsher climates, that combination is a meaningful draw. Use the search tool above to filter listings by neighbourhood, care type, and the features most relevant to your family.