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List of the largest municipalities in Canada by population. The table below lists the 100 largest census subdivisions (municipalities or municipal equivalents) in Canada by population, using data from the 2021 Canadian census for census subdivisions. [1]
Top 10 largest cities in Canada. The table below lists the ten largest cities in Canada in a different format, so that they can be copied and pasted. After Toronto (see section above for details) the next largest Canadian cities are Montreal (1,704,694), Calgary (1,239,220), Ottawa (934,243) and Edmonton (932,546).
Canada has 3 cities with more than a million people, 51 cities with between 100,000 and 1 million people, and 235 cities with between 10,000 and 100,000 people. The largest city in Canada is Toronto, with a population of 2,600,000 people.
Here are the 10 largest Canadian cities in terms of population: 1. Toronto - 6.255 milion. The beautiful skyline of Toronto across Lake Ontario. Toronto is located in Southern Ontario, on the Western shore of Lake Ontario (one of the Great Lakes). This provincial capital could be likened to the New York of Canada.
Canada’s ten largest cities offer a glimpse at the many approaches and issues. All populations are from the 2021 Canadian census and reflect the cities proper, as opposed to the larger census metropolitan area. 1. Toronto: 2,794,356.
A collection of four maps showing the distribution of population for 1851 (Newfoundland 1857), 1871 (Newfoundland 1869), 1901 and 1921 by historical region. This is a list of the largest cities in Canada by census starting with the 1871 census of Canada, the first national census.
This statistic shows the ten biggest cities in Canada in 2020, by number of inhabitants. In 2020, approximately 2.73 million people lived in Toronto, making it the biggest city in Canada.
Largest Cities in Canada - Current Results. The table below ranks the major urban centres that anchor the largest metropolitan populations in Canada. These represent the 33 urban regions that were home to at least one hundred thousand people during the national 2011 population census.
Between 2016 and 2021, the five CMAs with the highest percentage growth were located in British Columbia and Southern Ontario. The five CMAs with the lowest percentage growth were in Quebec, Alberta, Northern Ontario and Newfoundland and Labrador.
It depicts the top 10 municipalities (also called census subdivisions, or CSDs) ranked by population for each census year. For each census year, municipalities are ranked from the highest population count to the lowest, creating the ribbon effect.