Facts, stats and WAGE’s impact: Gender-based violence
Gender-based violence (GBV) is violence committed against someone based on their gender, gender expression, gender identity, or perceived gender. GBV can take many forms, including physical, sexual, societal, psychological, emotional, economic and technology-facilitated violence. The following facts and statistics demonstrate that GBV is a serious and ongoing issue in Canada, as well as the importance of taking action to prevent GBV and supporting victims, survivors, and their families.
Facts and stats
Affected populations and cost of GBV
GBV disproportionately affects women and girls. Certain populations at risk of GBV, or that are underserved when they experience these forms of violence, include:
- Women and girls
- Indigenous women and girls
- Black and racialized women
- Immigrant and refugee women
- Two-Spirit, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex and additional sexually and gender diverse (2SLGBTQI+) people
- Women with disabilities
- Women living in Northern, rural, and remote communities
GBV is rooted in gender inequality and is intensified by systemic inequalities, such as sexism, discrimination based on sexual orientation, gender identity and expression, colonialism, racism, ableism, classism, poverty, and a collective history of trauma. GBV can have long-lasting negative health, social, and economic consequences, often leading to intergenerational cycles of violence and abuse.
It is estimated that every year, the federal, provincial and territorial governments in Canada spend billions on healthcare, justice, and social system responses to GBV. It is further estimated that Canadian businesses lose millions due to productivity losses and individuals being unable to work as a result of GBV. Most importantly, individuals experiencing GBV pay considerable direct and indirect costs in terms of opportunity and impacts throughout their lifetimes and across generations.
Gender-related homicides
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From 2011 to 2021, an average of 102 women and girls were victims of gender-related homicide per year in Canada, totaling 1,125 over the period.
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Of these homicides, 93% were committed by a male intimate partner or family member of the victim.Footnote 1
Human trafficking
Human trafficking is a highly gendered crime. Police-reported incidents show that in 2019:
89%
of all victims were under the age of 35
95%
of identified victims were women and girls.Footnote 2
Intimate partner violence
More than 11 million people in Canada have experienced intimate partner violence (a type of gender-based violence) at least once since the age of 15. Footnote 3
The rates of intimate partner violence are higher for the following groups: Footnote 5
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The rates of intimate partner violence are higher for women with disabilities (55%)Footnote 4 , LGB+ women (67%)Footnote 5 ; Indigenous women (61%)Footnote 3 ; and women living in poverty (57%) than for all women (44%)Footnote 3 .
Sexual assaults
In Canada, more than four in ten (43%) Indigenous women have been sexually assaulted at least one since the age of 15Footnote 6 , including:
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45% of First Nations women, 44% of Métis women and 26% of Inuit women.Footnote 6
Unwanted sexual behaviours
More than 6 in 10 (61%) women aged 15 to 24 who lived in Canadian provinces had experienced unwanted sexual behaviours in a public place in 2018.Footnote 7
Violent victimization
Transgender and gender-diverse people experience more violent victimization.Footnote 8
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59% of transgender and gender-diverse people experience violent victimization compared to 37% of cisgender people.
Statistics by populations
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Women
Police Reported Data
- In Canada in 2023, of the 123,319 people aged 15 and over who experienced IPV (intimate partner violence), 78% were women. Footnote 9
- In 2023, the rate of intimate partner violence was nearly four times higher for women and girls (549 victims per 100,000 population) than for men and boys. Footnote 9
- Between 2019 and 2023, there were 979 victims of intimate partner homicide, and—similar to IPV in general—73% (719 victims) were women. Footnote 10
Self-Reported Data (2018):
- Women were significantly more likely than men to have experienced any form of IPV, including physical abuse (23% versus 17%, respectively), sexual abuse (44% versus 36%), and psychological abuse (43% versus 35%).Footnote 3
- Women, relative to men, were considerably more likely to have experienced the most severe forms of IPV in their lifetime (since the age of 15), including: being made to perform sex acts they did not want to perform (8% versus 1%), being confined or locked in a room or other space (3% versus 0.5%), being forced to have sex (10% versus 2%), being choked (7% versus 1%), and having harm or threats of harm directed towards their pets (4% versus 0.8%).Footnote 3
- Among people who experienced IPV in their lifetime (since the age of 15), women are about four times more likely than men (37% versus 9%, respectively) to have ever been afraid of a partner. 55% of women who experienced physical or sexual IPV feared a partner at some point. Being afraid of a partner can indicate intimate partner violence that is more coercive, more severe, and more likely to reflect a pattern of abusive behaviours. Footnote 3
- Women with a history of physical or sexual abuse before the age of 15 were about twice as likely as women with no such history to have experienced IPV either since age 15 (67% versus 35%) or in the past 12 months (18% versus 10%).Footnote 3
- Among people who experienced IPV in the past 12 months preceding the survey, women were twice as likely as men to have experienced at least one form of IPV on a daily or almost daily basis (12% versus 6%, respectively).Footnote 3
- Women are also more likely than men to experience sexual assaults. Self-reported data collected in 2018 in Canada shows that 33% of women were sexually assaulted at some point since the age of 15 – more than three times the proportion among men (9%). Both sexual assaults perpetrated by an intimate partner (12% versus 2%) and those perpetrated by someone else than an intimate partner (30% versus 8%) were significantly higher among women than men. Footnote 3
- Women living in Canada are almost four times more likely than men to have been sexually assaulted at least once since age 15 (30% versus 8% respectively). Footnote 12
- About one in three women living in the provinces (32%) and women living in the territories (35%) experienced unwanted sexual behaviours in a public place that made them feel unsafe or uncomfortable in the year preceding the survey. Significantly less men experienced the same in both the provinces (13%) and the territories (16%). Women were also more likely than men to have experienced unwanted sexual behaviours in the workplace (29% versus 17% in the provinces and 31% versus 16% in the territories) in the same time period. Footnote 13 Footnote 7
- Women were more likely than men to have experienced online harassment in the 12 months prior to the survey (18% versus 14% in the provincesFootnote 13 and 24% versus 16% in the territories).Footnote 7 Women are also more likely than men to have taken steps during that same time period to protect themselves from online harassment (28% versus 19% in the provincesFootnote 13 and 32% versus 22% in the territories). Footnote 7
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Young women and girls
Police Reported Data
- In 2023, 26,777 children and youth (aged 17 years and younger) were victims of police-reported family violence. Of these, more than three in five victims (62%) were girls.Footnote 9
- Compared with 2018, family violence against children and youth was 32% higher in 2023 (+35% for children; +25% for youth), with a larger increase being noted among girls (+28%) than boys (+24%).Footnote 9
Self-Reported Data (2018)
- Three in ten (29%) women 15 to 24 years of age reported having experienced at least one incident of IPV in the 12 months preceding the survey, more than double the proportion found among women between the ages of 25 to 34 or 35 to 44, and close to six times higher than that among women 65 years of age or older. Footnote 3
- Young women aged 15 to 24 were five times more likely than women aged 25 years and older to have been sexually assaulted (5% versus 1% respectively), three times more likely to have been physically assaulted (6% and 2%, respectively), and almost three times more likely to have been emotionally, financially or psychologically abused by an intimate partner in the previous 12 months (28% versus 10%).Footnote 15
- More than one in ten (12%) women aged 15 to 24 from the provinces were sexually assaulted in the year preceding the survey, which was significantly more than among women of any other age group.Footnote 13A
- More than six in ten (61%) women aged 15 to 24 from the provinces experienced unwanted sexual behaviours in a public place that made them feel unsafe or uncomfortable in the year preceding the survey, which was significantly higher than among women of any other age group.Footnote 13B
-
Indigenous Women and girls
Police-Reported Data
- Indigenous women are overrepresented as victims of intimate partner homicides in Canada. While Indigenous women account for about 5% of all women in Canada, they accounted for 22%Footnote 16 of all women killed by an intimate partner between 2019 and 2023. In 2023, 49 women, 11 of whom were Indigenous, were killed by their partner in Canada.Footnote 17
Self-Reported Data (2018)
- In the 12 months preceding the survey, 1 in 6 (17%) Indigenous women experienced at least one form of IPV—psychological, physical or sexual—compared with 12% of non-Indigenous women.Footnote 18
- In Canada, self-reported data collected in 2018 indicates that Indigenous women were more likely than non-Indigenous women to have been sexually assaulted at least once since age 15 (43% versus 30%, respectively).Footnote 12
- In Canada, more than four in ten (43%) Indigenous women have been sexually assaulted at least one since the age of 15, including 45% of First Nations women, 44% of Métis women and 26% of Inuit women. In comparison, about 30% of non-Indigenous women in Canada reported experiencing sexual assault since the age of 15. Among Indigenous men, 12% experienced a sexual assault at some point since the age of 15, including 9% of First Nations men, 16% of Métis men, and 8% of Inuit men –this compared with 8% of non-Indigenous men.Footnote 12
- First Nations women (40%) and Métis women (40%) living in the provinces were significantly more likely than non-Indigenous women (32%) to have experienced unwanted sexual behaviours in a public place that made them feel unsafe or uncomfortable in the year preceding the survey.Footnote 13 In contrast, the situation is slightly different in the territories. Overall, 29% of Indigenous women in the territories were the target of at least one inappropriate sexual behaviour in a public space in 2018. The corresponding proportion among non-Indigenous women was 41%.Footnote 7
- First Nations women (34%) and Métis women (30%) living in the provinces were significantly more likely than non-Indigenous women (18%) to have experienced online harassment in the year preceding the survey.Footnote 13 In the territories, Métis women (36%) were significantly more likely than non-Indigenous women (21%) to have experienced online harassment in the year preceding the survey.Footnote 7
- Among people who are lesbian, gay, bisexual, or of a sexual orientation that is not heterosexual (LGB+), Indigenous people were more likely than those who are non-Indigenous to have ever experienced a physical assault (73% versus 45%) or a sexual assault (65% versus 37%) since the age of 15.Footnote 8
- Among LGB+ people, those who are Indigenous were more likely than those who are non-Indigenous to have experienced online harassment in the year preceding the survey (62% versus 35%, respectively).Footnote 8
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Two-Spirit, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex and additional sexually and gender diverse people (2SLGBTQI+)
Self-Reported Data (2018)
- An estimated 1 million people living in Canada are lesbian, gay, bisexual or of a sexual orientation that is not heterosexual (LGB+)—representing 4% of the population of Canada 15 years of age and older.Footnote 8
- Almost half (49%) of LGB+ women indicated that they had been physically or sexually assaulted by an intimate partner since age 15, almost double what was indicated by heterosexual women (25%).Footnote 5
- One in five (20%) LGB+ women had indicated that they had experienced some form of IPV within the past year, almost twice what was said by heterosexual women (12%).Footnote 5
- One in two (50%) LGB+ women and one in four (26%) LGB+ men in Canada were sexually assaulted since age 15 – significantly more than among heterosexual women (30%) and men (8%).Footnote 8A
- About one in two LGB+ women (45%) and LGB+ men (47%) were physically assaulted since age 15, significantly more than among heterosexual women (26%) and men (33%).Footnote 8A
- 69% of LGB+ women and 41% of LGB+ men had experienced inappropriate sexual behaviours in a public place that made them feel unsafe or uncomfortable in the year preceding the survey – significantly more than among heterosexual women (31%) and men (12%).Footnote 8
- Four in ten (40%) LGB+ women and three in ten (32%) LGB+ men experienced online harassment in the 12 months preceding the survey–more than twice the proportion of heterosexual women (18%) and men (13%).Footnote 8
- 49% of LGB+ women and 35% LGB+ men experienced unwanted sexual behaviours in the workplace in the year preceding the survey – significantly more than among heterosexual women (28%) and men (16%).Footnote 8
- Approximately 75,000 people living in Canada are transgender or gender diverse, representing 0.24% of the Canadian population aged 15 and older.Footnote 8
- In the year preceding the survey, transgender and gender diverse people in Canada were more than twice as likely as cisgender people to have experienced unwanted sexual behaviours in public places that made them feel unsafe or uncomfortable (58% versus 23%, respectively) and in the workplace (69% versus 23%).Footnote 8
- Transgender and gender diverse people were more likely than cisgender people to have experienced online harassment in the year preceding the survey (42% versus 16%).Footnote 8
-
Women living in Northern, remote and rural areas
Police Reported Data
- In 2023, the rate of intimate partner violence was highest in the North (1,073 victims per 100,000 population), followed by the rural south (393) and the urban south (299). This pattern was similar for the rates of family violence. Footnote 9
- Regardless of geographic region, rates of intimate partner violence increased from 2018 to 2023. In the North, intimate partner violence increased by 21%, in the rural south, by 17%, and in the urban south, 12%. Rates of family violence also increased in all regions from 2018 to 2023.Footnote 9
Self-Reported Data
- In 2018, women living in the territories were twice as likely as men to have been the target of inappropriate sexual behaviour in the workplace in the 12 months preceding the survey (31% and 16%, respectively). Footnote 7
-
Women with disabilities
Self-Reported Data (2018)
- In the 12 months preceding the survey, 16% of women with disabilities experienced some form of IPV, compared to 10% of women without disabilities.Footnote 4
- Among LGBTQ2 women with disabilities, almost seven in ten (71%) experienced some form of IPV since the age of 15.Footnote 4
- In Canada, women living with a disability were significantly more likely than women without a disability to have been sexually assaulted since the age of 15 (39% versus 24%, respectively).Footnote 12
- In the 12 months preceding the survey, women living with a disability were significantly more likely than women without a disability to have experienced unwanted sexual behaviours in a public place that made them feel unsafe or uncomfortable, both in the provinces (39% versus 27%, respectively) and in the territories (45% versus 28%).Footnote 13 Footnote 7
- Women living with a disability were more likely than women without a disability to have experienced online harassment in the 12 months preceding the survey both in the provinces (27% versus 13%, respectively) and in the territories (35% versus 16%).Footnote 13 Footnote 7
- 39% of women living with a disability in the territories experienced unwanted sexual behaviour in the workplace in the year preceding the survey, compared with 25% of women without a disability.Footnote 7
- Among people who are lesbian, gay, bisexual or of a sexual orientation that is not heterosexual (LGB+), those living with a disability were more likely to report that they had been physically assaulted (55%) or sexually assaulted (46%) since age 15 than LGB+ people who did not have a disability (36% and 29%, respectively).Footnote 8
- LGB+ people living with a disability (67%) were more likely than LGB+ people without a disability (44%) to have experienced an unwanted sexual behaviour in a public place that made them feel unsafe or uncomfortable in the year preceding the survey.Footnote 8
- LGB+ people living with a disability were more likely than LGB+ people without a disability to have experienced online harassment in the year preceding the survey (46% versus 25%).Footnote 8
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Postsecondary student population
Self-Reported Data (2019)
- Among students attending a postsecondary institution located in the provinces of Canada, almost one in seven (15%) women students were sexually assaulted in the postsecondary setting at least once since they started their studies – three times the proportion of men students who experienced the same (5%).Footnote 11
- One in ten (11%) women students living in the provinces experienced a sexual assault in a postsecondary setting in the year preceding the survey – more than twice the proportion of men students who experienced the same (4%).Footnote 11
- Students who are LGB+ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, or of a sexual orientation that is not heterosexual), students living with a disability, and students who sometimes wear a visible religious symbol living in the provinces were significantly more likely to have experienced unwanted sexual behaviours. They were also significantly more likely to have been sexually assaulted in the postsecondary setting in the year preceding the survey.Footnote8
- 45% of women students and 32% men students in the provinces personally experienced unwanted sexual behaviours in a public place in the context of their postsecondary studies in the year preceding the survey.Footnote 11
- One in ten (10%) Indigenous women students in the provinces experienced a sexual assault in the postsecondary setting in the year preceding the survey – a proportion that was not significantly different than among non-Indigenous women students (8%). Notably, Indigenous men students were more than twice as likely as non-Indigenous men students to have been sexually assaulted during that same time period (9% versus 4%, respectively). Further, sexual assault was as common among Indigenous women and men students – a marked contrast to what was seen among non-Indigenous students where women were considerably more likely to have been sexually assaulted.Footnote 11
- One in five (20%) women students and almost one in eight (13%) men students living in the provinces stated that they personally experienced discrimination based on their actual or perceived gender, gender identity or sexual orientation in the context of their postsecondary studies in the year preceding the survey.Footnote 14
- LGB+ students, transgender and gender diverse students, students who are living with a disability, and students who sometimes wear a visible religious symbol living in the provinces were significantly more likely to have experienced discrimination based on gender, gender identity or sexual orientation in the postsecondary context in the year preceding the survey.Footnote 14
- Among postsecondary students living in the provinces, 10% of racialized women students were sexually assaulted in the postsecondary context in the year preceding the survey, more than among racialized men (4%) but slightly less than for women who are not racialized (11%)Footnote 11
-
Visible minority women
Self-Reported Data (2018)
- Among people who had ever been in an intimate partner relationship, 29% of women belonging to an ethno-cultural group designated as a visible minority reported experiencing some kind of psychological, physical, or sexual violence committed by an intimate partner in their lifetime (since the age of 15), significantly less than among non-visible minority women (47%).Footnote 19
- Visible minority women and non-visible minority women were equally likely to have experienced intimate partner violence in the form of physical abuse (both 2%) or sexual abuse (both 1%) in the past 12 months.Footnote 19
- One-quarter (25%) of visible minority women between the ages of 15 and 24 experienced IPV in the 12 months preceding the survey. Among visible minority women, the proportion of those who experienced IPV was more than twice as high among those aged 15 to 24 than any other age group.Footnote 19
- In Canada, 19% of women who are visible minorities living in the provinces were sexually assaulted since age 15, significantly less than for women who are not visible minorities (33%).Footnote 12
- Women who are visible minorities living in the provinces were slightly more likely than women who are not visible minorities to have experienced unwanted sexual behaviours in public that made them feel unsafe or uncomfortable in the year preceding the survey (35% versus 31%, respectively).Footnote 13
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Senior women
- From 2018 to 2023, intimate partner violence increased by 36% for seniors aged 65 years and older.Footnote 9
- In 2023, 7,054 seniors aged 65 years and older were victims of police-reported family violence, and of these victims, nearly 6 in 10 (57%) were women. Senior women were most often victimized by their spouse.Footnote 9
- Between 2019 and 2023, a total of 201 seniors were killed by a family member, women accounting for 55% (111 victims) of all senior victims of family-related homicide.Footnote 20
WAGE’s impact
The statistics above show the importance of taking action to prevent gender-based violence as well as supporting victims, survivors and their families.
In 2017, WAGE led on the development and implementation of the federal GBV Strategy, which is a whole-of-government approach to ending GBV. The Strategy encompasses all federal initiatives to prevent and address GBV. Seven federal departments and agencies received funding for specific initiatives. Since the launch of the Strategy, the Government of Canada has invested over $800 million and $44 million per year ongoing.
Following the launch of the Strategy, the Department reiterated its lead role in preventing and addressing GBV by creating a specific Gender-based Violence Program, providing direct funding to organizations.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, the demand for crisis hotline services significantly increased across Canada. WAGE worked with provinces and territories to put in place bilateral agreements for a total commitment of $30 million over 5 years. This funding helps provide more robust services, resources, and supports to serve the urgent needs of people experiencing gender-based violence and their families.
In addition, WAGE worked with the Federal, Provincial and Territorial Ministers responsible for the Status of Women to implement the National Action Plan to End Gender-based Violence launched in 2022. Flexible bilateral agreements totaling $525 million over 4 years have been signed with all provinces and territories to address each jurisdiction’s respective challenges, needs and priorities, guiding the efforts to end gender-based violence from coast to coast to coast.
Everyone has a role to play in ending GBV. WAGE’s "It’s Not Just" national youth campaign and the annual 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-based Violence campaign aim to increase awareness, build knowledge, and ultimately shift beliefs and actions to end the cycle of violence too many Canadians experience daily.
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