Census > 2006 Census: Analysis series >
2006 Census: Portrait of the Canadian Population in 2006, by Age and Sex: Findings
By Laurent Martel and Éric Caron Malenfant, Demography Division, Statistics Canada
- Highlights
- National portrait
- More seniors, fewer children
- A record one in seven Canadians is 65 years or older
- The median age is up as well and now stands at 39.5 years
- Despite our aging trend, Canada's population remains one of the youngest in the G8
- The average age of seniors is increasing
- Sharp increase in the number of centenarians
- Rapid aging of the working-age population (aged 15 to 64)
- Baby-boomers remain the largest generation
- Provincial/Territorial populations by age and sex
- Population aging affects every province
- The Atlantic provinces are among the oldest provinces in the country
- Quebec has more than 1 million seniors
- Ontario remains one of the younger provinces, but it too is aging.
- Nearly one person in five is under 15 years in the Prairie provinces
- British Columbia is older than average
- The territories have the youngest populations in Canada
- Subprovincial population dynamics
- Urban and rural Canada: the difference is young adults
- Census metropolitan areas, though younger, are aging too
- The suburbs of census metropolitan areas are younger than the downtown areas
- Three large urban areas
- Portrait of mid-size urban centres
- Portrait of small towns, rural areas and the territories
2006 Census supplementary navigation
About the analysis
- This report presents the highlights of the age and sex data release from the 2006 Census of Population. Numerous colour maps, figures and tables illustrate the latest demographic trends and geographic patterns observed from the published data.
Links to other sources
- News release as reported in The Daily
- Definitions, data sources and methods: Record number 3901
- How to cite census products
Technical notes
Navigation and search
Note: This page contains several navigation menus. To enhance accessibility, most of these menus and the site search box are grouped in this section.
To find out more about accessibility features on our site, read our accessibility page.


