Canada’s population continues to catch its breath after record growth it’s trying to tame. Statistics Canada’s (StatCan) latest population estimates show the population declined for a third consecutive quarter in Q2 2026. After record growth, the country is now shrinking at its fastest pace. However, that pullback is still just a drop in the bucket after record-shattering growth from 2022 to 2024.
Canada’s Population Has Dropped By Over 230k
Canadian population estimates, quarterly.
Source: StatCan; Better Dwelling.
Canada’s population slipped 0.1% (-55.0k) to 41.4 million, down 0.5% (-187.5k) from last year. This marks the third straight quarterly decline, and 0.6% (-234.6k) fewer than the peak reported in Q3 2025. The country’s population is now at its lowest level since Q3 2024, nearly two years ago. It’s a fairly sharp drop, but a drop in the bucket following the record growth during the 2022-2024 surge.
Canada’s Non-Permanent Resident Population Plunges By Over 500k
Canadian population estimates: non-permanent residents, quarterly.
Source: StatCan; Better Dwelling.
Virtually the entire decline is related to a drop in non-permanent residents (NPRs). The segment shrank 4.4% (-117.9k) to 2.56 million, a sixth straight quarterly drop. NPRs fell 17.0% (-524.4k) from last year and 18.8% (-590.6k) from the record high. The group is now at its weakest level since Q2 2023, a problem that sounds concerning until one views those numbers in context.
Between Q4 2021 and its demographic peak in Q4 2024, this group surged 118.3% to 3.15 million. After more than doubling in a span of 3 years, a 17% decline from peak is minor relative to the soaring growth policymakers stimulated.
Canada Needs 490k Fewer Temporary Residents To Hit Its 5% Target
The pullback is sharp, but likely temporary. The net outflow of temporary residents fell to its lowest level in 3 quarters, meaning the declines are tapering. Policymakers pledged to reduce the non-permanent resident population to 5% of Canada’s total population. Considering the current ratio is 6.1%, this requires 490,000 fewer temporary residents, adding 9.8 million permanent residents/citizens, or a combination. That’s ambitious.
The non-partisan Parliamentary Budget Officer (PBO) confirmed policymakers can meet this goal by 2027. However, note that the target date was quietly delayed by a year, and the plan requires an accounting trick to reclassify people. Moving the goal post, but still technically meet it.
That math is challenging regardless of how it’s sliced up. But at least the PBO thinks it’s kind of, sort of possible. Though it’s unclear if their confidence is at a similar level to their confidence in fiscal restraint, which Parliament’s watchdog pegged at roughly 1%. It’s possible, just unlikely.



















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