Official Statistics for Canada on Religions

Statistics Canada has released some statistics on religions in Canada plus projections for 2031. The noticeable projected trends are the drop in Christians (75% to 65%), the increase in non-Christians (7.7% to 14%) and the increase in no religion from 18% to 21%. Some religions are growing - Muslims go from 2.7% to 6.8% and Christian Orthodox plus "other Christians" go from 4.7% to 6.9%. Since Statistics Canada are the people who run the census and provide the government's social statistics, it's probably the most accurate although projections are always susceptible to error.

Religions in Canada

 20062031
thousands%thousands%
Total 32,522 100.0 42,078 100.0
Christian religious denominations 24,340 74.8 27,285 64.8
Catholic 13,830 42.5 15,389 36.6
Protestant 8,970 27.6 8,973 21.3
Christian Orthodox 566 1.7 978 2.3
Other Christians 974 3.0 1,944 4.6
Non-Christian religious denominations 2,501 7.7 6,013 14.3
Muslim 884 2.7 2,870 6.8
Jewish 348 1.1 421 1.0
Buddhist 358 1.1 607 1.4
Hindu 406 1.2 1,024 2.4
Sikh 384 1.2 906 2.2
Other religions 122 0.4 185 0.4
No religion 5,680 17.5 8,780 20.9

"Other Christians" includes persons who report "Christian", "Apostolic", "Born-again Christian" and "Evangelical".

Note: 2006 data on religious denomination have been projected from 2001.

Source: Statistics Canada, Demography Division.

 

In a separate report issued on the same date, Statistics Canada released a graph showing the historical trend in Church attendance. It has been redrawn with identical data to make it more readable - original is here.

Religious attendance rates, by sex, 1985 to 2008

church-trends

Monthly means attended at least once a month.

As can be seen, Church attendance is steadily declining although there is a reluctance to give up going to Church altogether.

 
Comments (2)
  • Northern Free Thinkers  - The problem with Canadian religious stats

    is that they deal with religious affiliation/ practice, and not religious 'feelings' and belief in gods, and spirituality. Other countries polls are more reliable for atheists than Canada's. Living in Yukon, I can't keep count of the number of times I have met people who register as 'no religious affiliation' who are in fact strong believers in woo woo. It's quite depressing, and is a problem with statistics that we atheists should seek to address.

  • Chase

    What is this "woo woo" you speak of?

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