Moving to Prince Edward Island is a logistical process unlike moving to any other Canadian province — the island is physically separated from the mainland, meaning your household goods and vehicle must cross the 12.9km Confederation Bridge from New Brunswick (the only road connection) or arrive by Marine Atlantic ferry from Pictou, Nova Scotia to Wood Islands, PEI (a summer-season option). Once on the island, the administrative relocation process is managed through Access PEI for driver’s licences and vehicle registration and Health PEI for provincial health coverage. PEI’s small scale means that these processes are efficiently handled from a small number of locations, and the island’s self-describing “gentle” character extends to the bureaucratic experience. The province’s immigration programs — the PEI Provincial Nominee Program and the Atlantic Immigration Program — are among the most accessible in Canada, and PEI’s aggressive population growth strategy (from 140,000 in 2015 to 170,000 in 2025) reflects an active government effort to attract both interprovincial migrants and international immigrants to address labour shortages in healthcare, agriculture, and hospitality.
Getting to the Island: Confederation Bridge and Ferry
- Confederation Bridge: The 12.9km fixed link from Borden-Carleton, PEI to Cape Jourimain, New Brunswick is the only year-round vehicle route to the island; open 24 hours; the toll is charged in the New Brunswick-bound (leaving PEI) direction only (approximately CAD $50/vehicle); no toll entering PEI; the bridge drive takes approximately 10 minutes; wind restrictions occasionally close the bridge to high-profile vehicles and motorcycles
- Northumberland Ferries (Pictou to Wood Islands): The summer ferry route from Pictou, Nova Scotia to Wood Islands, PEI (75 minutes; May–January depending on ice conditions); useful for moves originating in Nova Scotia; vehicles plus passengers approximately CAD $80–$120 per trip
- Air access: Charlottetown Airport (YYG) serves direct flights to Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal, and Halifax; limited air freight options for household goods; air relocation is practical for those moving without vehicles or with minimal household goods
Driver’s Licence and Vehicle Registration: Access PEI
- Access PEI: The provincial one-stop service delivery agency handles driver licensing, vehicle registration, and other provincial services at locations in Charlottetown, Summerside, Montague, Souris, and O’Leary
- Licence transfer: New PEI residents must obtain a Prince Edward Island driver’s licence within 90 days of establishing residency; Canadian licences from other provinces are exchanged without testing for the equivalent class
- Vehicle registration: Vehicles must be registered in PEI within 90 days; annual registration at Access PEI locations; vehicle safety inspection required for initial registration and transfer
- Auto insurance: PEI uses the private insurance market; the island has experienced higher-than-national-average insurance rates; expect CAD $1,200–$1,800/year for standard coverage; shop multiple insurers (Intact, Aviva, The Co-operators, and local Maritime brokers)
Health PEI: Provincial Health Coverage
- Health PEI Registration: Apply for provincial health coverage at Access PEI locations or online; bring proof of PEI residency (lease agreement, utility bill, or property deed) and Canadian identity documents
- Waiting period: PEI imposes a 3-month waiting period for new residents from other Canadian provinces; maintain your originating province’s health card for the transition period or purchase private insurance
- Queen Elizabeth Hospital (Charlottetown): PEI’s only acute-care general hospital, providing emergency, surgical, maternity, and specialized care for the island’s entire population; the single-hospital model means all tertiary care is centralized in Charlottetown
- Prince County Hospital (Summerside): The western PEI community hospital providing acute care for Prince County; surgical and emergency services with complex cases transferred to QEH in Charlottetown
- PEI Pharmacare Program: Drug benefits for seniors 65+, children under 18 for specific drug categories, and social assistance recipients; the Catastrophic Drug Program assists working-age residents whose drug costs exceed a threshold percentage of income
Schools and Education
- English Language School Board: The public English-language school board manages all K–12 schools in the province; French immersion programs are available island-wide from Grade 1 (early) and Grade 7 (late) in all major communities
- Commission scolaire de langue française: The French-language school board serves the island’s francophone minority community with French-language instruction from Kindergarten to Grade 12 at several Charlottetown and Summerside locations
- University of Prince Edward Island (UPEI): The province’s sole university (4,500 students) in Charlottetown; known for the Atlantic Veterinary College (one of five veterinary schools in Canada), business, nursing, and education programs; the campus’s research partnership with the provincial agriculture and fisheries industries reflects PEI’s economic character
- Holland College: The provincial community college with campuses in Charlottetown, Summerside, and regional learning centres; programs in culinary arts (the Culinary Boot Camp), early childhood education, business, and trades; the Culinary Institute of Canada at Holland College’s waterfront campus is Atlantic Canada’s premier culinary training institution
Immigration and the PEI Provincial Nominee Program
- PEI Provincial Nominee Program (PEI PNP): Streams for skilled workers in priority sectors (healthcare, agriculture, aquaculture, information technology, and construction); the Labour Impact categories require a valid job offer from a PEI employer; the Business Impact stream supports entrepreneurs establishing businesses in the province
- Atlantic Immigration Program (AIP): The federal-Atlantic provincial program allows designated PEI employers to hire international workers without a Labour Market Impact Assessment; healthcare (nurses, physicians, personal support workers), hospitality management, and skilled trades are the most active employer designations
- Portuguese-speaking community: PEI has attracted a significant Portuguese-speaking community through the Atlantic immigration programs; the island’s existing Portuguese-Canadian community (rooted in the Acadian and maritime fishing traditions) provides a social integration network for new Portuguese-speaking immigrants
- Housing support for newcomers: The island’s recent housing pressure has prompted provincial investment in affordable housing; newcomer support organizations (PEI Association for Newcomers to Canada, the Immigrant and Refugee Services Association PEI) provide settlement services, language training, and housing assistance for new arrivals
Preparing for Your Move
The logistical side of relocating to Prince Edward Island follows a familiar sequence regardless of where you are coming from: secure housing before or immediately after arrival, transfer any professional licenses if your occupation requires it, register your vehicle and update your driver’s licence within the timeframe required by local law (typically 30 to 90 days for new residents), and register to vote at your new address. Connecting with community organizations, sports clubs, neighborhood associations, or professional networks early in the process can dramatically accelerate the sense of belonging. In many parts of Prince Edward Island that have grown rapidly over the past decade, a significant proportion of the population has relocated from elsewhere, which means that being new to the area is genuinely normal — and that the infrastructure for meeting people and building a life from scratch is well established.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do you get to Prince Edward Island and what does the Confederation Bridge cost?
Prince Edward Island is connected to mainland Canada by the 12.9km Confederation Bridge from Borden-Carleton, PEI to Cape Jourimain, New Brunswick — the world’s longest bridge over ice-covered water and the only year-round vehicle route to the island. The bridge is open 24 hours; the toll is charged in the New Brunswick-bound (leaving PEI) direction only, approximately CAD $50 per vehicle — there is no toll when entering PEI. The bridge drive takes approximately 10 minutes; wind restrictions occasionally close the bridge to high-profile vehicles and motorcycles. The summer ferry alternative is Northumberland Ferries from Pictou, Nova Scotia to Wood Islands, PEI (75 minutes; May to January depending on ice conditions; vehicle plus passengers approximately CAD $80–$120 per trip) — useful for moves originating in Nova Scotia. Air: Charlottetown Airport (YYG) has direct flights to Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal, and Halifax.
What are PEI’s driver’s licence, vehicle registration, and auto insurance requirements?
Access PEI is the province’s one-stop service delivery agency, handling driver licensing, vehicle registration, and other provincial services at locations in Charlottetown, Summerside, Montague, Souris, and O’Leary. New PEI residents must obtain a Prince Edward Island driver’s licence within 90 days of establishing residency; Canadian licences from other provinces are exchanged without testing for the equivalent class. Vehicles must be registered in PEI within 90 days; a vehicle safety inspection is required for initial registration and transfer. PEI uses the private insurance market and has experienced above-national-average insurance rates — expect CAD $1,200–$1,800 per year for standard coverage; shop multiple insurers including Intact, Aviva, The Co-operators, and local Maritime brokers for competitive rates.
How does Health PEI’s provincial health coverage work for new residents?
Apply for provincial health coverage at Access PEI locations or online, bringing proof of PEI residency (lease agreement, utility bill, or property deed) and Canadian identity documents. PEI imposes a 3-month waiting period for new residents from other Canadian provinces — maintain your originating province’s health card for the transition period, or purchase private insurance. PEI’s hospital system is highly centralized: the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Charlottetown is the province’s only acute-care general hospital, providing emergency, surgical, maternity, and specialized care for the island’s entire population. The Prince County Hospital in Summerside provides acute care for western PEI; complex cases are transferred to QEH in Charlottetown. The PEI Pharmacare Program covers seniors 65+ and social assistance recipients; a Catastrophic Drug Program assists working-age residents whose drug costs exceed a threshold percentage of income.
What immigration programs does Prince Edward Island offer?
PEI has one of the most accessible provincial nominee programs in Canada and has aggressively pursued population growth from 140,000 in 2015 to 170,000 in 2025 to address labour shortages in healthcare, agriculture, and hospitality. The PEI Provincial Nominee Program (PEI PNP) operates Labour Impact streams for skilled workers with job offers in priority sectors — healthcare, agriculture, aquaculture, information technology, and construction — and a Business Impact stream for entrepreneurs establishing businesses on the island. The Atlantic Immigration Program (AIP) allows designated PEI employers to support permanent residence for international workers without a Labour Market Impact Assessment; healthcare (nurses, physicians, personal support workers), hospitality management, and skilled trades are the most active employer designations. PEI has attracted a notable Portuguese-speaking community through these programs; newcomer support organizations including the PEI Association for Newcomers to Canada and the Immigrant and Refugee Services Association PEI provide settlement services, language training, and housing assistance for new arrivals.
What are PEI’s universities, colleges, and school system like?
The University of Prince Edward Island (UPEI) is the province’s sole university (approximately 4,500 students) in Charlottetown; it is best known nationally for the Atlantic Veterinary College — one of only five veterinary schools in Canada — alongside business, nursing, and education programs. UPEI’s research partnerships with the provincial agriculture and fisheries industries reflect the island’s economic character and provide applied research opportunities. Holland College is the provincial community college with campuses in Charlottetown, Summerside, and regional learning centres; it offers programs in culinary arts (including the Culinary Institute of Canada at Holland College’s waterfront campus — Atlantic Canada’s premier culinary training institution), early childhood education, business, and trades. The K–12 system operates through the English Language School Board (French immersion from Grade 1 early or Grade 7 late, island-wide) and the Commission scolaire de langue française for francophone students. Private school options on PEI are limited compared to mainland provinces — Colonel Gray High School and other public schools provide strong IB and honours programming as alternatives.



