Home Diversity, Equity & InclusionSouth Asian population in Canada nearly quadrupled over 25 years, now largest racialized group

South Asian population in Canada nearly quadrupled over 25 years, now largest racialized group

by HR News Canada Staff
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South Asian populations in Canada grew to nearly 2.6 million people in 2021, making them the country’s largest racialized group and representing 7.1% of the total population, according to a new Statistics Canada report released today. The population nearly quadrupled from 669,060 people in 1996, when it made up 2.4% of the population.

The growth has significant implications for Canadian workplaces, as South Asian populations are projected to reach between 4.7 million and 6.5 million people by 2041, representing 11% to 12.5% of the total population.

Education levels exceed national average

In 2021, 58% of South Asians aged 25 to 54 held a bachelor’s degree or higher, compared with 32% of the non-racialized, non-Indigenous population. The proportion remained relatively consistent across most places of birth, including India (63%), Pakistan (61%), Europe (59%), Africa (58%) and Canada (56%).

South Asians born in the United States had the highest educational attainment at 73%, while those born in Sri Lanka (29%), the Caribbean and Central and South America (26%), Oceania (14%) and Bhutan (8%) had lower rates.

Canadian-born South Asians whose parents were both born in Sri Lanka had notably higher educational attainment (64%) than their immigrant counterparts from that country.

Employment patterns show gender gap

South Asian men had similar employment rates to their non-racialized, non-Indigenous counterparts in May 2021, at 85% and 84% respectively for those aged 25 to 54. South Asian women, however, had an employment rate of 69%, 10 percentage points lower than non-racialized, non-Indigenous women at 79%.

Labour Force Survey data from the second quarter of 2025 showed the pattern continued, with employment rates for South Asian men at 89% compared with 87% for men overall, while South Asian women were at 75% compared with 80% for women overall.

Birthplace influences employment outcomes

Employment rates varied significantly by place of birth. In May 2021, women born in Pakistan had an employment rate of 47%, those from Bangladesh 55%, and those from Sri Lanka 61%, all lower than the 73% rate for women born in India.

Men born in India had an employment rate of 89%, compared with 82% for those born in Pakistan, and 78% for those from Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.

Unemployment rates followed similar patterns. South Asian men born in India had a 5% unemployment rate, while those from Bangladesh, Pakistan and Sri Lanka ranged from 10% to 12%. Women born in India had an 11% unemployment rate, while those from Bangladesh, Pakistan and Sri Lanka ranged from 15% to 21%.

Immigration patterns and family structures

Among South Asian immigrants who arrived between 1980 and 2021, 54% were economic immigrants. The proportion increased to 69% among those who immigrated between 2011 and 2021, compared with 36% for those who arrived between 1981 and 1990.

Economic immigrants made up the majority from India (57%), Pakistan (56%) and Bangladesh (61%), while those from Sri Lanka were primarily refugees (42%), family-sponsored immigrants (33%) and economic immigrants (21%).

In 2021, India was the most common place of birth for South Asians in Canada at 44%, followed by Pakistan (9%), Sri Lanka (5%) and Bangladesh (3%). About 60% were born in Southern Asia, 30% in Canada, and 10% in other regions.

The most common household types among South Asian populations were two-parent families with children (45%) and multigenerational families (20%). The share living in multigenerational families was more than twice the rate of the overall Canadian population (7%).

The analytical portrait is the third in a Statistics Canada series on racialized groups in Canada, developed to support Canada’s Anti-Racism Strategy. The report used data from the 2021 Census of Population, earlier censuses, the Labour Force Survey and the 2023 Canadian Income Survey.

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