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Immigration
The Canadian provinces, territories, and cities where new Canadian immigrants are moving to.
By Shelby Thevenot
Posted on February 22, 2023
This article was updated more than 6 months ago. Some information may be outdated.
In 2022, Canada set an immigration target of about 432,000. By the end of the year, Immigration, Refugees, and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) had landed more than expected—about 437,000.
The new IRCC data show which provinces and cities these 437,000+ people landed in, and through which immigration program.
Migration data have-real world impacts on newcomers. Policy makers, governments, and other stakeholders can use migration data to monitor existing strategies and inform new decisions for the future.
The following figures are from IRCC’s open data portal, where you can find Canadian immigration data that’s updated monthly.
In the 2022-2024 Immigration Levels Plan, IRCC called for 431,645 new permanent residents. The majority of which would come through economic class immigration, followed by family class, refugee class, then the final group called humanitarian and others.
The results of 2022 more-or-less followed the targets set out. A total of 437,120 new immigrants landed in Canada. IRCC admitted about 14,000 more than expected under economic class and about 370 more through the humanitarian and other category. Nearly 8,000 fewer than expected came through family class and about 1,200 fewer under the refugee class.
Note: All figures are rounded to the nearest multiple of 5 to protect the privacy of newcomers. For this reason, results may not add to the total sum indicated.
By a long shot, Ontario—once again—welcomed more immigrants than any other province in 2022.
A total of 184,725 new permanent residents landed in Ontario, around 42% of all new PRs. However, this was down on 2021, when the total was 199,295 (49%). As recently as 2015, more than half of all new PRs chose Ontario.
Provinces that saw more immigration in 2022 compared to 2021 include:
Provinces that observed fewer immigrants in 2022 compared to 2021 include:
Except for Nunavut which welcomed slightly more family-class immigrants, economic-class immigrants made up the majority of newcomers in all other provinces and territories. The second highest portion of immigrants by province fluctuated between family class and refugee class immigrants.
The following chart is a breakdown of immigration to each province and territory by immigration category admitted in 2022.
The following cities were the top destinations for newcomers in 2022.
Toronto was still the most popular destination, and by a large margin. More than 128,000 new permanent residents came to Toronto alone in 2022. Montreal, which welcomed the second-largest amount of newcomers, had nearly 53,000—less than half of the amount of people who moved to Toronto.
To learn more about major cities in Canada, check out Moving2Canada’s destination guides.
If you’re interested in moving to Canada but not sure which program you may be eligible for, check your eligibility for more than 20 different Canadian immigration programs by taking Moving2Canada’s free Canada Immigration Quiz.
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