Dominion of Canada, 1871 to 1931

One of the first acts of Canada after confederation was the creation of a national census. The government took the first national census in 1871, and afterwards, they took national censuses every ten years. These records contain detailed information about individuals and their families, such as marital status, occupation, residence, gender and ethnicity. The questions asked on the census varied from year to year. The completeness of the records varies, so some information might be missing

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Historical language

In your research, you may encounter historical language that is considered offensive today. Please read the notice about historical language in LAC’s collection.

On this page

Before you start

Gather information such as:

Places to look

LAC holds the following census records from after Confederation:

Census Provinces and territories included
Census of Canada, 1871 NB, NS, ON, QC
Census of Canada, 1881 AB, BC, MB, NB, NS, ON, PEI, QC, NWT, SK
Census of Canada, 1891 AB, BC, MB, NB, NS, ON, PEI, QC, NWT, SK
Census of Canada, 1901 AB, BC, MB, NB, NS, ON, PEI, QC, NWT, SK, YT
Census of Canada, 1911 AB, BC, MB, NB, NS, ON, PEI, QC, NWT, SK, YT
Census of Canada, 1921 AB, BC, MB, NB, NS, ON, PEI, QC, NWT, SK, YT
Census of Canada, 1931Footnote 1 AB, BC, MB, NB, NS, ON, PEI, QC, NWT, SK, YT

Census records can be found in the Statistics Canada fonds, formerly known as RG31.

Schedules

Dominion of Canada censuses generally follow the same pattern. They include similar types of questionnaires known as schedules from year-to-year, such as:

In most cases, only the original records for Population (Schedule 1) were preserved.

What people were asked about

Most censuses contain the following information:

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Access the records

Non-digitized records

In 1955, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics was authorized by the Public Records Committee to microfilm and destroy the original records from 1881 onwards. As a result, only microfilm copies of the Dominion of Canada census records exist.

The original paper copies that still exist for censuses before 1881 are fragile and not available for consultation.

Digitized records

All of the Canadian census records from 1871 onwards are available on digitized microfilm and can be searched using the Census Search.

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2025-08-04