Over the next 50 years, Canada’s population could soar to 76 million people, Statistics Canada said Tuesday.
However, that higher scenario estimate is down significantly from what the agency predicted last year.
As of July 1, 2025, Canada’s population was 41.7 million people, with that number expected to increase over the next five decades. A low-growth scenario would see Canada’s population increase to 44 million by 2075 and a medium-growth scenario would see it at 57.4 million, Statistics Canada said.
Get daily National news
The high-growth scenario predicts Canada’s population could be at 75.8 million by 2075.
Last year, Canada was projected to have nearly 81 million people by 2074 in a high-growth scenario and 59.3 million in a medium-growth scenario.
- MLA wants to scrap B.C.’s Human Rights Code. Some constituents want her gone instead
- B.C. appointed them to map old-growth. Now they say province is failing to save it
- Canada lost 84K jobs as unemployment rate rose to 6.7% in February: StatCan
- Oil price spike from Iran war could help Canada in CUSMA talks, experts say
Statistics Canada said the newest projection “takes into account the most recent trends in Canadian demographics,” including “historically low fertility rates and several recent changes in immigration and temporary resident policies.”
Ontario and Quebec would continue to be Canada’s most populous provinces, at least over the next 25 years, while Alberta’s population is projected to outstrip that of British Columbia’s, Statistics Canada said.
Comments
Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.