Archived Content

Information identified as archived is provided for reference, research or recordkeeping purposes. It is not subject to the Government of Canada Web Standards and has not been altered or updated since it was archived. Please contact us to request a format other than those available.

NHS Profile, Calgary Southwest, Alberta, 2011

NHS data

NHS data

Select a table view
NHS data, Calgary Southwest, Alberta. Table summary
The table shows total, male and female data (appearing as column headers) for selected characteristics (appearing as row headers).
Characteristic Calgary Southwest
Alberta
(Federal electoral district, 2003 Representation Order)
Total Male Female
Citizenship
Total population in private households by citizenshipNational Household Survey data footnote 1 134,360 66,495 67,860
Canadian citizens 120,550 60,100 60,445
Canadian citizens aged under 18 26,010 13,500 12,510
Canadian citizens aged 18 and over 94,540 46,600 47,940
Not Canadian citizensNational Household Survey data footnote 2 13,810 6,395 7,415
Immigrant status and period of immigration
Total population in private households by immigrant status and period of immigrationNational Household Survey data footnote 3 134,360 66,495 67,860
Non-immigrantsNational Household Survey data footnote 4 94,655 47,595 47,060
ImmigrantsNational Household Survey data footnote 5 37,525 17,795 19,735
Before 1971 4,270 2,010 2,260
1971 to 1980 3,640 1,915 1,730
1981 to 1990 3,900 1,750 2,145
1991 to 2000 7,305 3,340 3,965
2001 to 2011National Household Survey data footnote 6 18,420 8,780 9,640
2001 to 2005 8,840 4,210 4,640
2006 to 2011National Household Survey data footnote 6 9,575 4,575 5,000
Non-permanent residentsNational Household Survey data footnote 7 2,180 1,110 1,070
Age at immigration
Total immigrant population in private households by age at immigrationNational Household Survey data footnote 8 37,530 17,790 19,735
Under 5 years 3,720 1,845 1,875
5 to 14 years 6,675 3,415 3,255
15 to 24 years 6,235 2,780 3,455
25 to 44 years 17,735 8,255 9,475
45 years and over 3,165 1,495 1,670
Immigrant status and selected places of birth
Total population in private households by immigrant status and selected places of birthNational Household Survey data footnote 9 134,360 66,500 67,860
Non-immigrantsNational Household Survey data footnote 10 94,655 47,595 47,055
Born in province of residence 57,000 28,775 28,220
Born outside province of residence 37,650 18,820 18,835
ImmigrantsNational Household Survey data footnote 11 37,530 17,790 19,735
Americas 4,625 2,280 2,345
United States 1,440 695 745
Jamaica 85 30 60
Guyana 145 55 85
Haiti 0 0 0
Mexico 255 140 115
Trinidad and Tobago 95 40 55
Colombia 730 395 335
El Salvador 350 130 225
Peru 120 70 55
Chile 160 85 75
Other places of birth in Americas 1,230 635 605
Europe 12,490 5,985 6,500
United KingdomNational Household Survey data footnote 12 3,360 1,590 1,765
Italy 335 165 170
Germany 765 375 395
Poland 1,245 545 695
Portugal 50 0 30
Netherlands 440 185 255
France 160 70 95
Romania 1,185 600 585
Russian Federation 1,155 520 630
Greece 95 55 45
Ukraine 755 350 405
Croatia 185 100 85
Hungary 295 170 125
Bosnia and Herzegovina 265 135 130
Serbia 170 80 100
Ireland, Republic of 190 110 80
Other places of birth in Europe 1,845 925 920
Africa 2,520 1,285 1,235
Morocco 105 50 50
Algeria 75 35 40
Egypt 150 95 55
South Africa, Republic of 465 235 225
Nigeria 530 230 300
Ethiopia 145 55 95
Kenya 210 110 105
Other places of birth in Africa 830 475 355
Asia 17,620 8,110 9,510
India 1,785 925 860
ChinaNational Household Survey data footnote 13 3,840 1,820 2,020
Philippines 6,390 2,720 3,670
Hong Kong Special Administrative Region 745 375 375
Viet NamNational Household Survey data footnote 14 385 140 245
Pakistan 590 305 285
Sri Lanka 260 130 130
IranNational Household Survey data footnote 15 445 220 225
Korea, SouthNational Household Survey data footnote 16 755 315 440
Lebanon 145 85 65
Taiwan 250 115 135
Iraq 230 120 110
Bangladesh 80 50 30
Afghanistan 75 55 20
Japan 220 75 145
Turkey 0 0 0
Other places of birth in Asia 1,420 660 765
Oceania and otherNational Household Survey data footnote 17 270 130 140
Fiji 65 35 35
Other places of birthNational Household Survey data footnote 18 200 95 110
Non-permanent residentsNational Household Survey data footnote 19 2,180 1,115 1,070
Recent immigrants by selected place of birth
Total recent immigrant population in private households by selected places of birthNational Household Survey data footnote 20 9,575 4,575 5,000
Americas 1,490 795 700
United States 290 170 120
Mexico 130 80 45
Cuba 105 45 55
Haiti 0 0 0
Jamaica 0 0 0
Brazil 145 60 80
Colombia 260 150 110
Guyana 0 0 0
Peru 75 40 35
VenezuelaNational Household Survey data footnote 21 340 185 155
Other places of birth in Americas 135 55 85
Europe 1,805 905 900
France 25 0 20
Germany 50 30 25
Poland 40 20 20
Romania 425 200 230
MoldovaNational Household Survey data footnote 22 120 70 45
Russian Federation 325 155 165
Ukraine 305 155 145
United KingdomNational Household Survey data footnote 12 390 195 195
Other places of birth in Europe 125 70 55
Africa 710 320 390
Nigeria 375 150 220
Ethiopia 20 0 15
Mauritius 0 0 0
Somalia 0 0 0
Algeria 40 0 30
Egypt 30 15 0
Morocco 25 0 0
Tunisia 0 0 0
Cameroon 15 0 0
Congo, The Democratic Republic of the 0 0 0
South Africa, Republic of 20 0 0
Other places of birth in Africa 145 80 70
Asia 5,460 2,510 2,955
Philippines 2,750 1,240 1,510
ChinaNational Household Survey data footnote 13 905 435 465
India 525 260 265
Pakistan 165 80 85
IranNational Household Survey data footnote 15 105 50 55
South KoreaNational Household Survey data footnote 16 275 120 155
Sri Lanka 70 30 40
Iraq 90 45 50
Bangladesh 0 0 0
Lebanon 0 0 0
Viet NamNational Household Survey data footnote 14 25 10 15
Taiwan 15 0 0
Afghanistan 0 0 0
Japan 90 0 60
Turkey 0 0 0
Israel 45 30 15
Nepal 0 0 0
Hong Kong Special Administrative Region 0 0 0
United Arab Emirates 35 0 20
Saudi Arabia 45 15 30
SyriaNational Household Survey data footnote 23 0 0 0
Other places of birth in Asia 285 125 160
Oceania and otherNational Household Survey data footnote 17 110 55 65
Generation status
Total population in private households by generation statusNational Household Survey data footnote 24 134,360 66,495 67,860
First generationNational Household Survey data footnote 25 40,190 19,115 21,070
Second generationNational Household Survey data footnote 26 27,585 14,055 13,525
Third generation or moreNational Household Survey data footnote 27 66,590 33,325 33,265
Visible minority population
Total population in private households by visible minority 134,360 66,500 67,865
Total visible minority populationNational Household Survey data footnote 28 31,290 15,185 16,110
South AsianNational Household Survey data footnote 29 4,445 2,315 2,135
Chinese 7,120 3,385 3,735
Black 2,735 1,410 1,320
Filipino 8,625 3,820 4,805
Latin American 3,020 1,615 1,405
Arab 1,050 540 510
Southeast AsianNational Household Survey data footnote 30 815 380 435
West AsianNational Household Survey data footnote 31 765 420 340
Korean 1,055 510 550
Japanese 580 285 295
Visible minority, n.i.e.National Household Survey data footnote 32 345 150 190
Multiple visible minoritiesNational Household Survey data footnote 33 745 350 395
Not a visible minorityNational Household Survey data footnote 34 103,065 51,315 51,755
Ethnic origin population
Total population in private households by ethnic originsNational Household Survey data footnote 35 134,360 66,500 67,865
North American Aboriginal origins 4,905 2,300 2,605
First Nations (North American Indian) 3,095 1,400 1,695
Inuit 35 25 0
Métis 1,950 955 995
Other North American origins 28,435 14,295 14,140
Acadian 220 130 90
American 2,740 1,265 1,480
Canadian 26,425 13,415 13,015
New Brunswicker 0 0 0
Newfoundlander 40 20 15
Nova Scotian 0 0 0
Ontarian 0 0 0
Québécois 30 25 0
Other North American origins, n.i.e.National Household Survey data footnote 36 0 0 0
European origins 93,705 46,190 47,520
British Isles origins 58,450 28,865 29,585
Channel Islander 20 20 0
Cornish 0 0 0
English 34,705 17,195 17,510
Irish 21,555 10,695 10,865
Manx 25 0 25
Scottish 25,570 12,225 13,345
Welsh 2,975 1,460 1,510
British Isles origins, n.i.e.National Household Survey data footnote 37 3,690 1,730 1,960
French origins 12,205 6,010 6,195
Alsatian 0 0 0
Breton 15 0 0
French 12,180 5,990 6,195
Western European origins (except French origins) 26,370 13,130 13,240
Austrian 1,485 730 755
Belgian 690 335 355
Dutch 5,395 2,790 2,605
Flemish 110 55 50
Frisian 0 0 0
German 20,170 9,975 10,195
Luxembourger 45 25 25
Swiss 865 405 465
Western European origins, n.i.e.National Household Survey data footnote 38 0 0 0
Northern European origins (except British Isles origins) 9,860 4,550 5,310
Danish 2,140 1,005 1,130
Finnish 635 250 380
Icelandic 675 350 330
Norwegian 3,985 1,840 2,140
Swedish 2,925 1,280 1,645
Northern European origins, n.i.e.National Household Survey data footnote 39 410 200 210
Eastern European origins 25,760 12,635 13,125
Bulgarian 180 100 90
Byelorussian 235 105 135
Czech 1,170 620 545
Czechoslovakian, n.o.s. 345 135 210
Estonian 100 40 50
Hungarian 2,290 1,050 1,245
Latvian 150 75 70
Lithuanian 380 205 175
Moldovan 185 105 75
Polish 6,765 3,170 3,595
Romanian 2,075 940 1,135
Russian 5,955 3,050 2,900
Slovak 595 305 290
Ukrainian 10,310 5,050 5,260
Eastern European origins, n.i.e.National Household Survey data footnote 40 115 60 65
Southern European origins 8,935 4,450 4,485
Albanian 120 70 50
Bosnian 115 45 70
Croatian 550 270 280
Cypriot 0 0 0
Greek 735 395 345
Italian 3,555 1,755 1,800
Kosovar 0 0 0
Macedonian 110 55 55
Maltese 20 0 0
Montenegrin 0 0 0
Portuguese 675 345 330
Serbian 420 220 205
Sicilian 0 0 0
Slovenian 140 75 70
Spanish 2,715 1,325 1,390
Yugoslavian, n.o.s. 235 140 95
Southern European origins, n.i.e.National Household Survey data footnote 41 0 0 0
Other European origins 3,110 1,475 1,645
Basque 35 0 20
Jewish 2,690 1,250 1,430
Roma (Gypsy) 25 0 0
Slavic, n.o.s. 65 30 35
Other European origins, n.i.e.National Household Survey data footnote 42 320 170 150
Caribbean origins 1,005 515 485
Antiguan 20 0 0
Bahamian 0 0 0
Barbadian 140 85 50
Bermudan 0 0 0
Carib 0 0 0
Cuban 180 95 90
Dominican 0 0 0
Grenadian 0 0 0
Haitian 30 20 0
Jamaican 300 125 180
Kittitian/Nevisian 0 0 0
Martinican 0 0 0
Montserratan 0 0 0
Puerto Rican 0 0 0
St. Lucian 0 0 0
Trinidadian/Tobagonian 135 85 45
Vincentian/Grenadinian 0 0 0
West Indian, n.o.s. 170 80 85
Caribbean origins, n.i.e.National Household Survey data footnote 43 0 0 0
Latin, Central and South American origins 3,235 1,715 1,525
Aboriginal from Central/South America (except Maya) 135 55 75
Argentinian 30 10 25
Belizean 20 15 0
Bolivian 50 30 20
Brazilian 155 100 60
Chilean 170 85 85
Colombian 800 435 365
Costa Rican 0 0 0
Ecuadorian 50 25 25
Guatemalan 40 30 0
Guyanese 230 115 115
Hispanic 95 70 30
Honduran 35 25 0
Maya 20 0 0
Mexican 430 235 195
Nicaraguan 20 0 10
Panamanian 30 0 0
Paraguayan 0 0 0
Peruvian 125 75 50
Salvadorean 345 155 190
Uruguayan 0 0 0
Venezuelan 490 250 240
Latin, Central and South American origins, n.i.e.National Household Survey data footnote 44 85 60 25
African origins 3,315 1,680 1,640
Central and West African origins 795 380 410
Akan 0 0 0
Angolan 0 0 0
Ashanti 0 0 0
Beninese 0 0 0
Burkinabe 0 0 0
Cameroonian 30 15 15
Chadian 0 0 0
Congolese 0 0 0
Gabonese 0 0 0
Gambian 0 0 0
Ghanaian 70 30 35
Guinean 0 0 0
Ibo 45 25 15
Ivorian 0 0 0
Liberian 0 0 0
Malian 0 0 0
Nigerian 495 225 265
Peulh 0 0 0
Senegalese 75 45 0
Sierra Leonean 0 0 0
Togolese 0 0 0
Yoruba 50 25 25
Central and West African origins, n.i.e.National Household Survey data footnote 45 35 0 25
North African origins 685 335 345
Algerian 110 50 65
Berber 15 0 15
Coptic 0 0 0
Dinka 10 0 0
Egyptian 190 100 90
Libyan 55 25 35
Maure 0 0 0
Moroccan 85 35 55
Sudanese 170 90 80
Tunisian 40 25 0
North African origins, n.i.e.National Household Survey data footnote 46 0 0 0
Southern and East African origins 1,135 620 515
Afrikaner 15 0 0
Amhara 0 0 0
Bantu, n.o.s. 0 0 0
Burundian 0 0 0
Eritrean 55 25 35
Ethiopian 175 70 100
Harari 0 0 0
Kenyan 115 60 60
Malagasy 0 0 0
Mauritian 0 0 0
Oromo 0 0 0
Rwandan 20 0 15
Seychellois 0 0 0
Somali 0 0 0
South African 445 245 200
Tanzanian 30 10 0
Tigrian 0 0 0
Ugandan 0 0 0
Zambian 0 0 0
Zimbabwean 50 25 25
Zulu 0 0 0
Southern and East African origins, n.i.e.National Household Survey data footnote 47 145 85 60
Other African origins 765 380 390
Black, n.o.s.National Household Survey data footnote 48 30 0 0
Other African origins, n.i.e.National Household Survey data footnote 49 740 365 380
Asian origins 26,075 12,405 13,665
West Central Asian and Middle Eastern origins 2,505 1,300 1,195
Afghan 115 70 45
Arab, n.o.s. 255 145 105
Armenian 150 70 85
Assyrian 15 0 0
Azerbaijani 0 0 0
Georgian 30 20 10
Iranian 625 315 305
Iraqi 285 135 150
Israeli 55 25 35
Jordanian 15 15 0
Kazakh 20 15 0
Kurd 60 35 25
Kuwaiti 0 0 0
Lebanese 505 290 215
Palestinian 85 60 30
Pashtun 0 0 0
Saudi Arabian 0 0 0
Syrian 120 60 60
Tajik 0 0 0
Tatar 35 0 25
Turk 100 40 60
Uighur 40 15 30
Uzbek 0 0 0
Yemeni 20 0 0
West Central Asian and Middle Eastern origins, n.i.e.National Household Survey data footnote 50 95 30 65
South Asian origins 4,895 2,540 2,355
Bangladeshi 25 0 0
Bengali 30 20 0
East IndianNational Household Survey data footnote 48 3,910 2,030 1,880
Goan 0 0 0
Gujarati 0 0 0
Kashmiri 0 0 0
Nepali 35 25 15
Pakistani 475 235 245
Punjabi 115 60 60
Sinhalese 60 45 20
Sri Lankan 255 125 130
Tamil 25 0 0
South Asian origins, n.i.e.National Household Survey data footnote 51 110 70 35
East and Southeast Asian origins 18,810 8,665 10,145
Burmese 20 10 10
Cambodian (Khmer) 70 40 30
Chinese 8,115 3,870 4,250
Filipino 8,950 4,000 4,945
Hmong 0 0 0
Indonesian 135 55 80
Japanese 705 340 365
Korean 1,095 520 565
Laotian 0 0 0
Malaysian 45 20 25
Mongolian 35 0 35
Singaporean 0 0 0
Taiwanese 55 15 35
Thai 45 30 10
Tibetan 25 0 0
Vietnamese 460 185 280
East and Southeast Asian origins, n.i.e.National Household Survey data footnote 52 15 0 0
Other Asian origins 105 75 0
Other Asian origins, n.i.e.National Household Survey data footnote 53 105 75 0
Oceania origins 555 220 335
Australian 235 105 130
New Zealander 205 70 135
Pacific Islands origins 110 45 65
Fijian 85 25 55
Hawaiian 0 0 0
Maori 0 0 0
Polynesian, n.o.s. 0 0 0
Samoan 0 0 0
Pacific Islands origins, n.i.e.National Household Survey data footnote 54 0 0 0
Religion
Total population in private households by religionNational Household Survey data footnote 55 134,360 66,500 67,865
Buddhist 995 475 520
Christian 83,560 39,265 44,300
Anglican 6,010 2,740 3,275
Baptist 2,145 1,000 1,140
Catholic 37,105 17,900 19,205
Christian Orthodox 4,265 2,095 2,170
Lutheran 3,430 1,540 1,890
Pentecostal 1,805 835 965
Presbyterian 1,935 795 1,135
United Church 9,830 4,290 5,545
Other Christian 17,040 8,065 8,975
Hindu 1,820 935 880
Jewish 2,750 1,250 1,495
Muslim 3,105 1,680 1,425
Sikh 410 250 165
Traditional (Aboriginal) Spirituality 200 65 130
Other religions 670 310 355
No religious affiliation 40,850 22,265 18,585
Aboriginal population
Total population in private households by Aboriginal identity 134,360 66,500 67,865
Aboriginal identityNational Household Survey data footnote 56 3,365 1,610 1,755
First Nations (North American Indian) single identityNational Household Survey data footnote 57 1,930 940 990
Métis single identity 1,250 590 665
Inuk (Inuit) single identity 30 20 0
Multiple Aboriginal identitiesNational Household Survey data footnote 58 0 0 0
Aboriginal identities not included elsewhereNational Household Survey data footnote 59 150 60 90
Non-Aboriginal identity 130,995 64,890 66,105
Total population in private households by Registered or Treaty Indian statusNational Household Survey data footnote 57 134,365 66,495 67,865
Registered or Treaty IndianNational Household Survey data footnote 60 1,820 820 1,005
Not a Registered or Treaty Indian 132,540 65,680 66,860
Total population in private households by Aboriginal ancestryNational Household Survey data footnote 61 134,360 66,500 67,860
Aboriginal ancestryNational Household Survey data footnote 62 4,905 2,300 2,605
First Nations (North American Indian) Aboriginal ancestryNational Household Survey data footnote 57 3,090 1,400 1,695
Métis ancestry 1,955 955 995
Inuit ancestry 35 25 0
Non-Aboriginal ancestry onlyNational Household Survey data footnote 63 129,455 64,200 65,255
Non-official languages spoken
Total population in private households by non-official languages spokenNational Household Survey data footnote 64 41,105 19,530 21,575
Aboriginal languages 245 30 210
Algonquin 0 0 0
Atikamekw 0 0 0
Blackfoot 100 0 90
Cree languagesNational Household Survey data footnote 65 105 0 85
Mi'kmaq 0 0 0
Innu/Montagnais 0 0 0
Ojibway 0 0 0
Oji-Cree 0 0 0
Carrier 0 0 0
Dene 0 0 0
Tlicho (Dogrib) 0 0 0
Slavey, n.o.s. 0 0 0
Stoney 0 0 0
Inuktitut 0 0 0
Other Aboriginal languagesNational Household Survey data footnote 66 40 0 25
Non-Aboriginal languages 40,860 19,495 21,365
Italian 730 345 385
Portuguese 410 200 215
Romanian 1,335 645 690
Spanish 5,035 2,535 2,500
Dutch 635 265 365
Flemish 0 0 0
German 2,195 1,025 1,165
Yiddish 145 80 65
Danish 185 80 105
Norwegian 65 55 0
Swedish 30 0 15
Afrikaans 260 125 130
Gaelic languages 20 0 0
Bosnian 190 95 105
Bulgarian 80 30 55
Croatian 265 140 125
Czech 365 195 170
Macedonian 0 0 0
Polish 1,675 715 965
Russian 3,500 1,635 1,865
Serbian 365 175 185
Serbo-Croatian 75 30 45
Slovak 430 220 215
Slovenian 20 0 0
Ukrainian 1,065 465 600
Latvian 0 0 0
Lithuanian 55 20 35
Greek 400 195 200
Armenian 85 40 45
Albanian 105 65 40
Estonian 0 0 0
Finnish 65 40 30
Hungarian 660 390 270
Turkish 25 15 0
Berber languages (Kabyle) 0 0 0
Oromo 40 20 25
Somali 0 0 0
Amharic 185 95 95
Arabic 1,340 740 595
Hebrew 645 280 370
Maltese 0 0 0
Tigrigna 55 25 30
Semitic languages, n.i.e. 70 35 35
Bengali 200 95 105
Gujarati 795 390 405
Hindi 1,325 680 640
Konkani 35 0 25
Marathi 165 75 85
Panjabi (Punjabi) 675 370 305
Sindhi 145 70 80
Sinhala (Sinhalese) 165 85 80
Urdu 845 450 390
Nepali 15 10 0
Kurdish 55 45 15
Pashto 35 25 0
Persian (Farsi) 675 345 335
Indo-Iranian languages, n.i.e. 20 0 20
Kannada 30 15 15
Malayalam 175 75 95
Tamil 230 105 115
Telugu 40 15 25
Japanese 460 205 260
Korean 940 440 495
Cantonese 1,310 620 690
Fukien 25 0 0
Hakka 0 0 0
Mandarin 2,405 1,135 1,265
Taiwanese 40 20 15
Chinese, n.o.s. 2,610 1,200 1,410
Lao 0 0 0
Thai 40 25 0
Khmer (Cambodian) 55 0 40
Vietnamese 400 185 215
Bisayan languages 310 145 160
Ilocano 260 95 165
Malay 55 25 30
Tagalog (Pilipino,Filipino) 7,350 3,175 4,165
Akan (Twi) 35 0 20
Lingala 0 0 0
Rundi (Kirundi) 0 0 0
Rwanda (Kinyarwanda) 20 0 0
Swahili 125 85 35
Bantu languages, n.i.e. 40 25 15
Niger-Congo languages, n.i.e. 325 135 190
African languages, n.i.e. 145 85 60
Creoles 35 30 0
Other non-Aboriginal languagesNational Household Survey data footnote 67 830 385 445
Mobility
Total - Mobility status 1 year agoNational Household Survey data footnote 68 132,660 65,550 67,105
Non-movers 114,370 56,510 57,860
Movers 18,285 9,040 9,250
Non-migrants 12,710 6,395 6,315
Migrants 5,580 2,645 2,935
Internal migrants 3,835 1,840 1,995
Intraprovincial migrants 1,675 825 850
Interprovincial migrants 2,165 1,015 1,145
External migrants 1,745 805 940
Total - Mobility status 5 years agoNational Household Survey data footnote 69 125,880 62,085 63,800
Non-movers 70,685 34,580 36,105
Movers 55,195 27,500 27,695
Non-migrants 34,095 16,975 17,115
Migrants 21,100 10,520 10,575
Internal migrants 11,975 6,050 5,925
Intraprovincial migrants 3,995 1,995 2,000
Interprovincial migrants 7,980 4,055 3,925
External migrants 9,125 4,475 4,650
Education
Total population aged 15 years and over by highest certificate, diploma or degreeNational Household Survey data footnote 70 110,845 54,525 56,320
No certificate, diploma or degree 13,250 7,015 6,235
High school diploma or equivalentNational Household Survey data footnote 71 27,500 13,070 14,435
Postsecondary certificate, diploma or degreeNational Household Survey data footnote 72 70,095 34,440 35,650
Apprenticeship or trades certificate or diplomaNational Household Survey data footnote 73 8,720 5,755 2,960
College, CEGEP or other non-university certificate or diploma 20,805 8,995 11,805
University certificate or diploma below bachelor levelNational Household Survey data footnote 74 7,155 3,215 3,950
University certificate, diploma or degree at bachelor level or above 33,410 16,475 16,935
Bachelor's degree 23,090 11,015 12,075
University certificate, diploma or degree above bachelor levelNational Household Survey data footnote 75 10,320 5,455 4,865
Total population aged 25 to 64 years by highest certificate, diploma or degreeNational Household Survey data footnote 70 78,125 38,490 39,640
No certificate, diploma or degree 4,630 2,610 2,015
High school diploma or equivalentNational Household Survey data footnote 71 15,690 7,745 7,940
Postsecondary certificate, diploma or degreeNational Household Survey data footnote 72 57,805 28,125 29,680
Apprenticeship or trades certificate or diplomaNational Household Survey data footnote 73 6,540 4,360 2,180
College, CEGEP or other non-university certificate or diploma 16,935 7,335 9,600
University certificate or diploma below bachelor levelNational Household Survey data footnote 74 5,680 2,575 3,105
University certificate, diploma or degree at bachelor level or above 28,650 13,855 14,790
Bachelor's degree 19,770 9,295 10,475
University certificate, diploma or degree above bachelor levelNational Household Survey data footnote 75 8,875 4,555 4,320
Total population aged 15 years and over by major field of study - Classification of Instructional Programs (CIP) 2011National Household Survey data footnote 76 110,845 54,525 56,320
No postsecondary certificate, diploma or degreeNational Household Survey data footnote 77 40,755 20,080 20,670
Education 5,130 1,055 4,075
Visual and performing arts, and communications technologies 1,865 825 1,040
Humanities 2,635 830 1,810
Social and behavioural sciences and law 6,955 2,505 4,450
Business, management and public administration 15,895 6,360 9,540
Physical and life sciences and technologies 3,210 1,720 1,485
Mathematics, computer and information sciences 3,110 2,045 1,065
Architecture, engineering, and related technologies 17,990 15,530 2,460
Agriculture, natural resources and conservation 1,270 695 570
Health and related fieldsNational Household Survey data footnote 78 9,320 1,700 7,620
Personal, protective and transportation services 2,715 1,185 1,530
Other fields of studyNational Household Survey data footnote 79 0 0 0
Total population aged 15 years and over by location of study compared with province or territory of residenceNational Household Survey data footnote 80 110,845 54,525 56,320
No postsecondary certificate, diploma or degree 40,750 20,085 20,670
With postsecondary certificate, diploma or degree 70,090 34,445 35,645
Location of study inside Canada 50,985 25,215 25,770
Same as province or territory of residence 35,090 17,145 17,950
Another province or territory 15,895 8,075 7,825
Location of study outside Canada 19,100 9,225 9,875
Language used most often at work
Total population aged 15 years and over by language used most often at workNational Household Survey data footnote 81 87,585 45,625 41,960
Single responses 86,980 45,370 41,610
English 86,200 45,095 41,105
French 185 20 165
Non-official languages 600 255 345
Chinese, n.o.s. 140 75 65
Cantonese 50 15 30
Panjabi (Punjabi) 0 0 0
Mandarin 55 20 30
Spanish 85 20 65
Korean 35 20 15
German 0 0 0
Cree languagesNational Household Survey data footnote 82 0 0 0
Portuguese 0 0 0
Inuktitut 0 0 0
Other languages 215 100 115
Multiple responses 610 260 350
English and French 105 55 50
English and non-official language 490 200 290
French and non-official language 0 0 0
English, French and non-official language 20 0 15
Total population aged 15 years and over by language used most often at workNational Household Survey data footnote 81 87,590 45,625 41,960
English 86,195 45,095 41,100
French 185 20 160
Non-official language 600 255 345
Aboriginal 0 0 0
Non-Aboriginal 600 250 345
English and French 105 55 50
English and non-official language 490 195 290
French and non-official language 0 0 0
English, French and non-official language 15 0 10
Labour force status
Total population aged 15 years and over by labour force statusNational Household Survey data footnote 83 110,840 54,525 56,320
In the labour force 82,215 43,205 39,005
Employed 77,625 40,830 36,800
Unemployed 4,590 2,380 2,205
Not in the labour force 28,635 11,315 17,315
Participation rate 74.2 79.2 69.3
Employment rate 70.0 74.9 65.3
Unemployment rate 5.6 5.5 5.7
Class of worker
Total labour force aged 15 years and over by class of workerNational Household Survey data footnote 84 82,210 43,210 39,005
Class of worker - not applicableNational Household Survey data footnote 85 1,205 480 720
All classes of workerNational Household Survey data footnote 86 81,005 42,725 38,280
Employee 72,075 37,050 35,030
Self-employedNational Household Survey data footnote 87 8,930 5,675 3,250
Occupation
Total labour force population aged 15 years and over by occupation - National Occupational Classification (NOC) 2011National Household Survey data footnote 88 82,215 43,210 39,005
Occupation - not applicableNational Household Survey data footnote 89 1,205 485 720
All occupationsNational Household Survey data footnote 86 81,010 42,725 38,285
0 Management occupations 9,455 6,365 3,085
1 Business, finance and administration occupations 15,955 4,590 11,365
2 Natural and applied sciences and related occupations 10,635 8,410 2,225
3 Health occupations 4,865 990 3,880
4 Occupations in education, law and social, community and government services 8,350 2,465 5,880
5 Occupations in art, culture, recreation and sport 2,075 855 1,220
6 Sales and service occupations 17,575 7,775 9,800
7 Trades, transport and equipment operators and related occupations 9,740 9,260 480
8 Natural resources, agriculture and related production occupations 970 840 125
9 Occupations in manufacturing and utilities 1,390 1,170 215
Industry
Total labour force population aged 15 years and over by industry - North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) 2007National Household Survey data footnote 90 82,215 43,210 39,005
Industry - not applicableNational Household Survey data footnote 89 1,205 480 720
All industriesNational Household Survey data footnote 86 81,010 42,725 38,285
11 Agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting 365 245 115
21 Mining, quarrying, and oil and gas extraction 5,080 2,900 2,180
22 Utilities 915 590 315
23 Construction 7,305 6,130 1,170
31-33 Manufacturing 3,890 2,990 900
41 Wholesale trade 3,825 2,760 1,070
44-45 Retail trade 9,465 4,255 5,205
48-49 Transportation and warehousing 2,710 1,910 795
51 Information and cultural industries 1,780 1,000 785
52 Finance and insurance 3,310 1,325 1,985
53 Real estate and rental and leasing 1,555 900 660
54 Professional, scientific and technical services 10,505 6,430 4,075
55 Management of companies and enterprises 180 85 95
56 Administrative and support, waste management and remediation services 2,855 1,610 1,245
61 Educational services 4,870 1,220 3,650
62 Health care and social assistance 8,280 1,460 6,825
71 Arts, entertainment and recreation 2,040 1,160 880
72 Accommodation and food services 4,775 2,205 2,575
81 Other services (except public administration) 4,090 1,645 2,450
91 Public administration 3,220 1,905 1,315
Work activity
Total labour force aged 15 years and over by work activity in 2010National Household Survey data footnote 91 82,210 43,205 39,005
Did not work in 2010National Household Survey data footnote 92 3,465 1,695 1,770
Worked in 2010 78,750 41,515 37,235
1 to 13 weeks 4,105 1,810 2,295
14 to 26 weeks 6,115 3,050 3,065
27 to 39 weeks 4,735 2,265 2,465
40 to 48 weeks 12,985 6,555 6,430
49 to 52 weeks 50,805 27,835 22,970
Average weeks worked in 2010 44.7 45.3 44.0
Full-time or part-time weeks worked
Total labour force population aged 15 years and over by full-time or part-time weeks worked in 2010National Household Survey data footnote 93 82,215 43,205 39,005
Did not work in 2010National Household Survey data footnote 92 3,460 1,695 1,770
Worked in 2010 78,750 41,515 37,235
Worked full-time in 2010 63,260 36,365 26,900
Worked part-time in 2010 15,485 5,150 10,335
Place of work status
Total employed population aged 15 years and over by place of work statusNational Household Survey data footnote 94 77,625 40,830 36,800
Worked at home 5,025 2,270 2,760
Worked outside Canada 315 260 55
No fixed workplace address 8,980 6,750 2,230
Worked at usual place 63,300 31,550 31,750
Mode of transportation
Total employed population aged 15 years and over with a usual place of work or no fixed workplace address by mode of transportationNational Household Survey data footnote 95 72,285 38,300 33,985
Car, truck or van - as a driver 51,220 28,600 22,620
Car, truck or van - as a passenger 3,585 1,305 2,285
Public transit 14,060 6,630 7,425
Walked 1,820 795 1,025
Bicycle 520 440 80
Other methods 1,085 520 560
Median commuting duration
Total employed population aged 15 years and over with a usual place of work or no fixed workplace address by median commuting durationNational Household Survey data footnote 96 72,285 38,300 33,990
Median commuting duration 30.0 30.2 25.5
Time leaving for work
Total employed population aged 15 years and over by time leaving for workNational Household Survey data footnote 97 72,285 38,300 33,990
Between 5 and 6:59 a.m. 21,250 13,520 7,735
Between 7 and 9:00 a.m. 38,015 18,720 19,295
Anytime after 9:00 a.m. 13,020 6,060 6,965
Occupied private dwelling characteristics
Total number of occupied private dwellings by condition of dwellingNational Household Survey data footnote 98 51,640 ... ...
Only regular maintenance or minor repairs needed 49,635 ... ...
Major repairs needed 2,010 ... ...
Total number of occupied private dwellings by period of constructionNational Household Survey data footnote 99 51,645 ... ...
1960 or before 3,575 ... ...
1961 to 1980 18,935 ... ...
1981 to 1990 8,730 ... ...
1991 to 2000 7,365 ... ...
2001 to 2005 7,390 ... ...
2006 to 2011National Household Survey data footnote 100 5,640 ... ...
Total number of occupied private dwellings by number of roomsNational Household Survey data footnote 101 51,645 ... ...
1 to 4 rooms 8,760 ... ...
5 rooms 7,065 ... ...
6 rooms 7,385 ... ...
7 rooms 8,270 ... ...
8 or more rooms 20,165 ... ...
Average number of rooms per dwelling 7.0 ... ...
Total number of occupied private dwellings by number of bedroomsNational Household Survey data footnote 102 51,645 ... ...
0 to 1 bedroom 3,590 ... ...
2 bedrooms 9,800 ... ...
3 bedrooms 21,015 ... ...
4 or more bedrooms 17,240 ... ...
Household characteristics
Total number of private households by tenureNational Household Survey data footnote 103 51,645 ... ...
Owner 42,305 ... ...
Renter 9,340 ... ...
Band housing 0 ... ...
Total number of private households by condominium statusNational Household Survey data footnote 104 51,645 ... ...
Part of a condominium development 11,155 ... ...
Not part of a condominium development 40,490 ... ...
Total number of private households by number of household maintainersNational Household Survey data footnote 105 51,645 ... ...
1 household maintainer 29,555 ... ...
2 household maintainers 20,620 ... ...
3 or more household maintainers 1,470 ... ...
Total number of private households by age group of primary household maintainersNational Household Survey data footnote 106 51,645 ... ...
Under 25 years 1,800 ... ...
25 to 34 years 8,335 ... ...
35 to 44 years 10,725 ... ...
45 to 54 years 12,660 ... ...
55 to 64 years 9,015 ... ...
65 to 74 years 5,010 ... ...
75 years and over 4,100 ... ...
Total number of private households by number of persons per roomNational Household Survey data footnote 107 51,645 ... ...
One person or fewer per room 50,885 ... ...
More than one person per room 755 ... ...
Total number of private households by housing suitabilityNational Household Survey data footnote 108 51,640 ... ...
Suitable 49,430 ... ...
Not suitable 2,210 ... ...
Shelter costs
Total number of owner and tenant households with household total income greater than zero, in non-farm, non-reserve private dwellings by shelter-cost-to-income ratioNational Household Survey data footnote 109 51,525 ... ...
Spending less than 30% of household total income on shelter costs 39,815 ... ...
Spending 30% or more of household total income on shelter costs 11,710 ... ...
Spending 30% to less than 100% of household total income on shelter costs 9,580 ... ...
Number of owner households in non-farm, non-reserve private dwellings 42,300 ... ...
% of owner households with a mortgageNational Household Survey data footnote 110 62.3 ... ...
% of owner households spending 30% or more of household total income on shelter costsNational Household Survey data footnote 111 19.1 ... ...
Median monthly shelter costs for owned dwellings ($)National Household Survey data footnote 112 1,339 ... ...
Average monthly shelter costs for owned dwellings ($)National Household Survey data footnote 112 1,343 ... ...
Median value of dwellings ($)National Household Survey data footnote 113 400,537 ... ...
Average value of dwellings ($)National Household Survey data footnote 113 440,243 ... ...
Number of tenant households in non-farm, non-reserve private dwellings 9,340 ... ...
% of tenant households in subsidized housingNational Household Survey data footnote 114 8.8 ... ...
% of tenant households spending 30% or more of household total income on shelter costsNational Household Survey data footnote 115 39.1 ... ...
Median monthly shelter costs for rented dwellings ($)National Household Survey data footnote 116 1,160 ... ...
Average monthly shelter costs for rented dwellings ($)National Household Survey data footnote 116 1,208 ... ...
Income of individuals in 2010
Total income in 2010 of population aged 15 years and overNational Household Survey data footnote 117 110,845 54,520 56,320
Without income 5,235 2,530 2,705
With income 105,615 52,000 53,615
Under $5,000National Household Survey data footnote 118 10,600 4,685 5,915
$5,000 to $9,999 6,580 2,275 4,300
$10,000 to $14,999 6,880 2,445 4,430
$15,000 to $19,999 6,645 2,510 4,135
$20,000 to $29,999 12,150 4,940 7,210
$30,000 to $39,999 10,610 4,535 6,075
$40,000 to $49,999 10,405 4,615 5,790
$50,000 to $59,999 8,435 4,375 4,060
$60,000 to $79,999 12,280 6,935 5,350
$80,000 to $99,999 7,980 4,975 3,010
$100,000 and over 13,045 9,695 3,340
$100,000 to $124,999 5,100 3,445 1,655
$125,000 and over 7,940 6,255 1,685
Median income ($)National Household Survey data footnote 119 39,298 49,928 31,484
Average income ($)National Household Survey data footnote 119 55,628 70,621 41,088
After-tax income in 2010 of population 15 years and overNational Household Survey data footnote 120 110,840 54,525 56,320
Without after-tax income 5,255 2,530 2,725
With after-tax income 105,590 51,995 53,595
Under $5,000National Household Survey data footnote 121 10,870 4,790 6,085
$5,000 to $9,999 6,540 2,230 4,310
$10,000 to $14,999 7,155 2,545 4,610
$15,000 to $19,999 7,285 2,830 4,450
$20,000 to $29,999 14,020 5,695 8,325
$30,000 to $39,999 14,075 6,330 7,745
$40,000 to $49,999 12,010 5,965 6,040
$50,000 to $59,999 8,710 4,755 3,950
$60,000 to $79,999 11,890 7,170 4,720
$80,000 to $99,999 5,485 3,740 1,750
$100,000 and over 7,565 5,955 1,605
Median after-tax income ($)National Household Survey data footnote 122 35,002 42,693 28,682
Average after-tax income ($)National Household Survey data footnote 122 45,385 56,192 34,900
Composition of total income in 2010 of population 15 years and over (%)National Household Survey data footnote 123 100.0 100.0 100.0
Market income (%)National Household Survey data footnote 124 94.1 96.2 90.5
Employment income (%)National Household Survey data footnote 125 81.1 83.7 76.8
Wages and salaries (%)National Household Survey data footnote 126 77.9 80.3 73.8
Self-employment income (%)National Household Survey data footnote 127 3.2 3.3 3.1
Investment income (%)National Household Survey data footnote 128 6.6 6.4 6.9
Retirement pensions, superannuation and annuities (%)National Household Survey data footnote 129 4.4 4.5 4.3
Other money income (%)National Household Survey data footnote 130 1.9 1.6 2.5
Government transfer payments (%)National Household Survey data footnote 131 5.9 3.8 9.5
Canada/Quebec Pension Plan benefits (%)National Household Survey data footnote 132 1.9 1.5 2.5
Old Age Security pensions and Guaranteed Income Supplement (%)National Household Survey data footnote 133 1.4 0.9 2.3
Employment Insurance benefits (%)National Household Survey data footnote 134 1.0 0.7 1.5
Child benefits (%)National Household Survey data footnote 135 0.8 0.1 2.2
Other income from government sources (%)National Household Survey data footnote 136 0.7 0.6 1.0
Income taxes paid as a % of total incomeNational Household Survey data footnote 137 18.4 20.4 15.1
After-tax income as a % of total incomeNational Household Survey data footnote 138 81.6 79.6 84.9
Net capital gains or losses as a % of total incomeNational Household Survey data footnote 139 2.0 1.4 3.1
Population aged 15 years and over who worked full year, full time and with employment income in 2010National Household Survey data footnote 140 44,405 25,500 18,905
Median employment income in 2010 ($) 59,442 68,396 50,434
Average employment income in 2010 ($) 75,354 87,728 58,662
Family income in 2010 of economic familiesNational Household Survey data footnote 141 38,505 ... ...
Median family income ($) 102,687 ... ...
Average family income ($) 129,639 ... ...
Median after-tax family income ($) 87,016 ... ...
Average after-tax family income ($) 105,406 ... ...
Average family size 3.0 ... ...
Couple-only economic familiesNational Household Survey data footnote 142 13,645 ... ...
Median family income ($) 93,750 ... ...
Average family income ($) 122,580 ... ...
Median after-tax family income ($) 80,213 ... ...
Average after-tax family income ($) 99,151 ... ...
Average family size 2.0 ... ...
Couple-with-children economic familiesNational Household Survey data footnote 143 18,945 ... ...
Median family income ($) 121,198 ... ...
Average family income ($) 148,759 ... ...
Median after-tax family income ($) 101,884 ... ...
Average after-tax family income ($) 120,342 ... ...
Average family size 3.9 ... ...
Lone-parent economic familiesNational Household Survey data footnote 144 4,795 ... ...
Median family income ($) 65,380 ... ...
Average family income ($) 76,596 ... ...
Median after-tax family income ($) 58,692 ... ...
Average after-tax family income ($) 65,561 ... ...
Average family size 2.6 ... ...
Income in 2010 of population aged 15 years and over not in economic familiesNational Household Survey data footnote 145 17,870 8,730 9,140
Median total income ($)National Household Survey data footnote 146 39,921 42,916 35,767
Average total income ($)National Household Survey data footnote 146 49,446 53,778 45,307
Median after-tax income ($)National Household Survey data footnote 147 34,756 37,406 32,105
Average after-tax income ($)National Household Survey data footnote 147 41,066 43,976 38,287
Total population by decile of adjusted after-tax family incomeNational Household Survey data footnote 148 134,360 66,495 67,860
In bottom half of the Canadian distribution 43,770 20,540 23,225
In bottom decile 9,070 4,380 4,690
In second decile 6,270 2,690 3,585
In third decile 8,320 3,965 4,350
In fourth decile 9,370 4,395 4,980
In fifth decile 10,740 5,115 5,620
In top half of the Canadian distribution 90,590 45,950 44,640
In sixth decile 13,390 6,685 6,705
In seventh decile 14,540 7,255 7,285
In eighth decile 14,650 7,405 7,250
In ninth decile 19,310 9,780 9,525
In top decile 28,690 14,820 13,875
Income of households in 2010
Household total income in 2010 of private householdsNational Household Survey data footnote 149 51,645 ... ...
Under $5,000 1,330 ... ...
$5,000 to $9,999 460 ... ...
$10,000 to $14,999 725 ... ...
$15,000 to $19,999 1,205 ... ...
$20,000 to $29,999 2,490 ... ...
$30,000 to $39,999 2,865 ... ...
$40,000 to $49,999 3,370 ... ...
$50,000 to $59,999 3,295 ... ...
$60,000 to $79,999 7,120 ... ...
$80,000 to $99,999 6,550 ... ...
$100,000 to $124,999 6,270 ... ...
$125,000 to $149,999 4,640 ... ...
$150,000 and over 11,320 ... ...
After-tax income of households in 2010 of private householdsNational Household Survey data footnote 150 51,645 ... ...
Under $5,000 1,390 ... ...
$5,000 to $9,999 420 ... ...
$10,000 to $14,999 750 ... ...
$15,000 to $19,999 1,260 ... ...
$20,000 to $29,999 2,765 ... ...
$30,000 to $39,999 3,610 ... ...
$40,000 to $49,999 4,365 ... ...
$50,000 to $59,999 4,430 ... ...
$60,000 to $79,999 8,745 ... ...
$80,000 to $99,999 6,775 ... ...
$100,000 and over 17,130 ... ...
$100,000 to $124,999 6,305 ... ...
$125,000 and over 10,825 ... ...
Household income in 2010 of private householdsNational Household Survey data footnote 151 51,645 ... ...
Median household total income ($) 88,320 ... ...
Average household total income ($) 113,760 ... ...
Median after-tax household income ($) 75,302 ... ...
Average after-tax household income ($) 92,794 ... ...
One-person private householdsNational Household Survey data footnote 152 11,265 ... ...
Median household total income ($) 46,521 ... ...
Average household total income ($) 58,005 ... ...
Median after-tax household income ($) 40,369 ... ...
Average after-tax household income ($) 47,711 ... ...
Two-or-more-persons private householdsNational Household Survey data footnote 152 40,380 ... ...
Median household total income ($) 102,664 ... ...
Average household total income ($) 129,319 ... ...
Median after-tax household income ($) 87,054 ... ...
Average after-tax household income ($) 105,375 ... ...
Income of individuals in 2010
Population in private households for income statusNational Household Survey data footnote 153 134,360 66,500 67,860
Less than 18 years 28,835 14,900 13,935
Less than 6 years 9,870 5,115 4,755
18 to 64 years 91,390 45,285 46,110
65 years and over 14,130 6,315 7,820
In low income in 2010 based on after-tax low-income measure (LIM-AT) 11,345 5,185 6,165
Less than 18 years 2,910 1,485 1,425
Less than 6 years 1,105 525 580
18 to 64 years 7,690 3,545 4,145
65 years and over 745 150 595
Prevalence of low income in 2010 based on after-tax low-income measure (%) 8.4 7.8 9.1
Less than 18 years (%) 10.1 10.0 10.2
Less than 6 years (%) 11.2 10.3 12.2
18 to 64 years (%) 8.4 7.8 9.0
65 years and over (%) 5.3 2.4 7.6

Symbols

... not applicable

National Household Survey data: Footnotes

Footnote 1

Citizenship refers to the legal citizenship status of a person. Citizenship can be by birth or naturalization. A person may have more than one citizenship. A person may be stateless, that is, they may have no citizenship.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 1 referrer

Footnote 2

Includes persons who are stateless.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 2 referrer

Footnote 3

Period of immigration refers to the period in which the immigrant first obtained his or her landed immigrant/permanent resident status. A landed immigrant/permanent resident refers to a person who has been granted the right to live permanently in Canada by immigration authorities.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 3 referrer

Footnote 4

Non-immigrant refers to a person who is a Canadian citizen by birth.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 4 referrer

Footnote 5

Immigrant refers to a person who is or has ever been a landed immigrant/permanent resident. This person has been granted the right to live in Canada permanently by immigration authorities. Some immigrants have resided in Canada for a number of years, while others have arrived recently. Some immigrants are Canadian citizens, while others are not. Most immigrants are born outside Canada, but a small number are born in Canada. In the 2011 National Household Survey, 'Immigrants' includes immigrants who landed in Canada prior to May 10, 2011.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 5 referrer

Footnote 6

Includes immigrants who landed in Canada prior to May 10, 2011.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 6 referrer

Footnote 7

Non-permanent resident refers to a person from another country who has a work or study permit, or who is a refugee claimant, and any non-Canadian-born family member living in Canada with them.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 7 referrer

Footnote 8

Age at immigration refers to the age at which an immigrant first obtained landed immigrant/permanent resident status. Immigrant refers to a person who is or has ever been a landed immigrant/permanent resident. This person has been granted the right to live permanently in Canada by immigration authorities.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 8 referrer

Footnote 9

The places of birth selected are the most frequently reported by immigrants at the Canada level.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 9 referrer

Footnote 10

Non-immigrant refers to a person who is a Canadian citizen by birth.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 10 referrer

Footnote 11

Immigrant refers to a person who is or has ever been a landed immigrant/permanent resident. This person has been granted the right to live in Canada permanently by immigration authorities. Some immigrants have resided in Canada for a number of years, while others have arrived recently. Some immigrants are Canadian citizens, while others are not. Most immigrants are born outside Canada, but a small number are born in Canada. In the 2011 National Household Survey, 'Immigrants' includes immigrants who landed in Canada prior to May 10, 2011.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 11 referrer

Footnote 12

The official name of United Kingdom is United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. United Kingdom includes Scotland, Wales, England and Northern Ireland (excludes Isle of Man, the Channel Islands and British Overseas Territories).

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 12 referrer

Footnote 13

China excludes Hong Kong Special Administrative Region and Macao Special Administrative Region.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 13 referrer

Footnote 14

The official name of Viet Nam is Socialist Republic of Viet Nam.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 14 referrer

Footnote 15

The official name of Iran is Islamic Republic of Iran.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 15 referrer

Footnote 16

The official name of South Korea is Republic of Korea.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 16 referrer

Footnote 17

The category 'Oceania and other' includes places of birth in Oceania and responses not included elsewhere, such as 'born at sea.'

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 17 referrer

Footnote 18

The category 'Other places of birth' includes other places of birth in Oceania and responses not included elsewhere, such as 'born at sea.'

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 18 referrer

Footnote 19

Non-permanent resident refers to a person from another country who has a work or study permit, or who is a refugee claimant, and any non-Canadian-born family member living in Canada with them.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 19 referrer

Footnote 20

Recent immigrants are immigrants who landed in Canada between January 1, 2006 and May 10, 2011. Immigrant refers to a person who is or has ever been a landed immigrant/permanent resident. This person has been granted the right to live in Canada permanently by immigration authorities. Some immigrants have resided in Canada for a number of years, while others have arrived recently. Some immigrants are Canadian citizens, while others are not. Most immigrants are born outside Canada, but a small number are born in Canada. The places of birth selected are the most frequently reported by recent immigrants at the Canada level.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 20 referrer

Footnote 21

The official name of Venezuela is Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 21 referrer

Footnote 22

The official name of Moldova is Republic of Moldova.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 22 referrer

Footnote 23

The official name of Syria is Syrian Arab Republic.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 23 referrer

Footnote 24

Generation status refers to whether or not the person or the person's parents were born in Canada. It identifies persons as being first generation, second generation or third generation or more.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 24 referrer

Footnote 25

'First generation' includes persons who were born outside Canada. For the most part, these are people who are now, or have ever been, immigrants to Canada.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 25 referrer

Footnote 26

'Second generation' includes persons who were born in Canada and had at least one parent born outside Canada. For the most part, these are the children of immigrants.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 26 referrer

Footnote 27

'Third generation or more' includes persons who were born in Canada with both parents born in Canada.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 27 referrer

Footnote 28

The Employment Equity Act defines visible minorities as 'persons, other than Aboriginal peoples, who are non-Caucasian in race or non-white in colour.'

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 28 referrer

Footnote 29

For example, 'East Indian,' 'Pakistani,' 'Sri Lankan,' etc.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 29 referrer

Footnote 30

For example, 'Vietnamese,' 'Cambodian,' 'Malaysian,' 'Laotian,' etc.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 30 referrer

Footnote 31

For example, 'Iranian,' 'Afghan,' etc.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 31 referrer

Footnote 32

The abbreviation 'n.i.e.' means 'not included elsewhere.' Includes respondents who reported a write-in response such as 'Guyanese,' 'West Indian,' 'Tibetan,' 'Polynesian,' 'Pacific Islander,' etc.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 32 referrer

Footnote 33

Includes respondents who reported more than one visible minority group by checking two or more mark-in circles, e.g., 'Black' and 'South Asian.'

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 33 referrer

Footnote 34

Includes respondents who reported 'Yes' to the Aboriginal identity question (Question 18) as well as respondents who were not considered to be members of a visible minority group.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 34 referrer

Footnote 35

This is a total population estimate.  The sum of the ethnic groups in this table is greater than the total population estimate because a person may report more than one ethnic origin in the NHS.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 35 referrer

Footnote 36

Includes general responses indicating North American origins (e.g., 'North American') as well as more specific responses indicating North American origins that have not been included elsewhere (e.g., 'Maritimer,' 'Manitoban').

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 36 referrer

Footnote 37

Includes general responses indicating British Isles origins (e.g., 'British,' 'United Kingdom') as well as more specific responses indicating British Isles origins that have not been included elsewhere (e.g., 'Celtic').

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 37 referrer

Footnote 38

Includes general responses indicating Western European origins (e.g., 'Western European') as well as more specific responses indicating Western European origins that have not been included elsewhere (e.g., 'Liechtensteiner').

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 38 referrer

Footnote 39

Includes general responses indicating Northern European origins (e.g., 'Northern European') as well as more specific responses indicating Northern European origins that have not been included elsewhere (e.g., 'Faroese,' 'Scandinavian').

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 39 referrer

Footnote 40

Includes general responses indicating Eastern European origins (e.g., 'Eastern European') as well as more specific responses indicating Eastern European origins that have not been included elsewhere (e.g., 'Baltic').

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 40 referrer

Footnote 41

Includes general responses indicating Southern European origins (e.g., 'Southern European') as well as more specific responses indicating Southern European origins that have not been included elsewhere (e.g., 'Gibraltarian').

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 41 referrer

Footnote 42

Includes general responses indicating Other European origins (e.g., 'European') as well as more specific responses indicating European origins that have not been included elsewhere (e.g., 'Central European').

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 42 referrer

Footnote 43

Includes general responses indicating Caribbean origins (e.g., 'Caribbean') as well as more specific responses indicating Caribbean origins that have not been included elsewhere (e.g., 'Guadelupian,' 'Aruban').

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 43 referrer

Footnote 44

Includes general responses indicating Latin, Central or South American origins (e.g., 'South American') as well as more specific responses indicating Latin, Central or South American origins that have not been included elsewhere (e.g., 'Surinamese').

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 44 referrer

Footnote 45

Includes general responses indicating Central or West African origins (e.g., 'West African') as well as more specific responses indicating Central or West African origins that have not been included elsewhere (e.g., 'Ewe,' 'Wolof').

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 45 referrer

Footnote 46

Includes general responses indicating North African origins (e.g., 'North African') as well as more specific responses indicating North African origins that have not been included elsewhere (e.g., 'Maghreb').

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 46 referrer

Footnote 47

Includes general responses indicating Southern or East African origins (e.g., 'East African') as well as more specific responses indicating Southern or East African origins that have not been included elsewhere (e.g., 'Hutu,' 'Shona').

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 47 referrer

Footnote 48

Some respondents may choose to provide very specific ethnic origins in the National Household Survey (NHS), while other respondents may choose to give more general responses. This means that two respondents with the same ethnic ancestry could have different response patterns and thus could be counted as having different ethnic origins. For example, one respondent may report 'East Indian' ethnic origin while another respondent, with a similar ancestral background, may report 'Punjabi' or 'South Asian' origins; one respondent may report 'Black' while another, similar respondent, may report 'Ghanaian' or 'African.' As a result, ethnic origin data are very fluid, and counts for certain origins, such as 'East Indian' and 'Black,' may seem lower than initially expected. Users who wish to obtain broader response counts may wish to combine data for one or more ethnic origins together or use counts for ethnic categories such as 'South Asian origins' or 'African origins.' (Please note, however, that 'African origins' should not be considered equivalent to the 'Black' population group or visible minority status, as there are persons reporting African origins who report a population group or visible minority status other than 'Black.' Conversely, many people report a population group or visible minority status of 'Black' and do not report having 'African' origins. For information on population group and visible minority population in the 2011 NHS, refer to the appropriate definitions in this publication.)

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 48 referrer

Footnote 49

Includes general responses indicating Other African origins (e.g., 'African') as well as more specific responses indicating Other African origins that have not been included elsewhere (e.g., 'Saharan').

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 49 referrer

Footnote 50

Includes general responses indicating West Asian, Central Asian and Middle Eastern origins (e.g., 'West Asian,' 'Middle Eastern') as well as more specific responses indicating West Asian, Central Asian and Middle Eastern origins that have not been included elsewhere (e.g., 'Baloch,' 'Circassian').

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 50 referrer

Footnote 51

Includes general responses indicating South Asian origins (e.g., 'South Asian') as well as more specific responses indicating South Asian origins that have not been included elsewhere (e.g., 'Bhutanese').

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 51 referrer

Footnote 52

Includes general responses indicating East and Southeast Asian origins (e.g., 'Southeast Asian') as well as more specific responses indicating East and Southeast Asian origins that have not been included elsewhere (e.g., 'Bruneian,' 'Karen').

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 52 referrer

Footnote 53

Includes general responses indicating Other Asian origins (e.g., 'Asian') as well as more specific responses indicating Other Asian origins that have not been included elsewhere (e.g., 'Eurasian').

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 53 referrer

Footnote 54

Includes general responses indicating Pacific Islands origins (e.g., 'Pacific Islander') as well as more specific responses indicating Pacific Islands origins that have not been included elsewhere (e.g., 'Tahitian').

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 54 referrer

Footnote 55

Religion refers to the person's self-identification as having a connection or affiliation with any religious denomination, group, body, sect, cult or other religiously defined community or system of belief. Religion is not limited to formal membership in a religious organization or group. Persons without a religious connection or affiliation can self-identify as atheist, agnostic or humanist, or can provide another applicable response.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 55 referrer

Footnote 56

'Aboriginal identity' includes persons who reported being an Aboriginal person, that is, First Nations (North American Indian), Métis or Inuk (Inuit) and/or those who reported Registered or Treaty Indian status, that is registered under the Indian Act of Canada, and/or those who reported membership in a First Nation or Indian band. Aboriginal peoples of Canada are defined in the Constitution Act, 1982, section 35 (2) as including the Indian, Inuit and Métis peoples of Canada.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 56 referrer

Footnote 57

Users should be aware that the estimates associated with this variable are more affected than most by the incomplete enumeration of certain Indian reserves and Indian settlements in the National Household Survey (NHS). In 2011, there were a total of 36 Indian reserves and Indian settlements that were 'incompletely enumerated' in the NHS. For these reserves or settlements, NHS enumeration was either not permitted or was interrupted before it could be completed, or was not possible because of natural events (specifically forest fires in Northern Ontario). For additional information, please refer to the Aboriginal Peoples Reference Guide, National Household Survey (NHS), 2011.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 57 referrer

Footnote 58

'Multiple Aboriginal identities' includes persons who reported being any two or all three of the following: First Nations (North American Indian), Métis or Inuk (Inuit).

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 58 referrer

Footnote 59

'Aboriginal identities not included elsewhere' includes persons who did not report being First Nations (North American Indian), Métis or Inuk (Inuit) but who did report Registered or Treaty Indian status and/or membership in a First Nation or Indian band.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 59 referrer

Footnote 60

Registered or Treaty Indian status refers to whether or not a person reported being a Registered or Treaty Indian.' Registered or Treaty Indian' includes persons who reported being a Registered or Treaty Indian in Question 20. Registered Indians are persons who are registered under the Indian Act of Canada. Treaty Indians are persons who belong to a First Nation or Indian band that signed a treaty with the Crown. Registered or Treaty Indians are sometimes also called Status Indians.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 60 referrer

Footnote 61

This is a total population estimate. The sum of the ancestries in this table is greater than the total population estimate because a person may report more than one ancestry (ethnic origin) in the National Household Survey.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 61 referrer

Footnote 62

'Aboriginal ancestry' includes persons who reported one or more than one of First Nations (North American Indian), Métis or Inuit ancestry in Question 17, either with or without also reporting a non-Aboriginal ancestry. The sum of the categories 'First Nations (North American Indian) ancestry', 'Métis ancestry' and 'Inuit ancestry' is thus greater than the sum of the total for 'Aboriginal ancestry' because persons who reported more than one Aboriginal ancestry are included in the response category for each Aboriginal ancestry they reported. All respondents with Aboriginal ancestry are counted in at least one of the categories 'First Nations (North American Indian) ancestry,' 'Métis ancestry' and 'Inuit ancestry' and also in the category 'Aboriginal ancestry.' Aboriginal peoples of Canada are defined in the Constitution Act, 1982, section 35 (2) as including the Indian, Inuit and Métis peoples of Canada. Ancestry refers to the ethnic or cultural origins of the respondent's ancestors, an ancestor being usually more distant than a grandparent. A person can have more than one ethnic or cultural origin.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 62 referrer

Footnote 63

'Non-Aboriginal ancestry only' includes persons who did not report First Nations (North American Indian), Métis or Inuit ancestry in Question 17.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 63 referrer

Footnote 64

Refers to languages, other than English or French, in which the respondent can conduct a conversation. The category 'Non-official languages spoken' represents the sum of single language responses and multiple language responses received in the National Household Survey. Hence, this total is greater than the total population.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 64 referrer

Footnote 65

Cree languages include the following categories: Cree not otherwise specified (which refers to those who reported 'Cree'), Swampy Cree, Plains Cree, Woods Cree, and a category labelled 'Cree not included elsewhere' (which includes Moose Cree, Northern East Cree and Southern East Cree).

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 65 referrer

Footnote 66

This is a subtotal of all Aboriginal languages collected on May 10, 2011 that are not displayed separately here.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 66 referrer

Footnote 67

This is a subtotal of all non-Aboriginal languages, other than English or French, collected on May 10, 2011 that are not displayed separately here.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 67 referrer

Footnote 68

Refers to the status of a person with regard to the place of residence on the reference day, May 10, 2011, in relation to the place of residence on the same date one year earlier. Persons who have not moved are referred to as non-movers and persons who have moved from one residence to another are referred to as movers. Movers include non-migrants and migrants. Non-migrants are persons who did move but remained in the same city, town, township, village or Indian reserve. Migrants include internal migrants who moved to a different city, town, township, village or Indian reserve within Canada. External migrants include persons who lived outside Canada at the earlier reference date.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 68 referrer

Footnote 69

Refers to the status of a person with regard to the place of residence on the reference day, May 10, 2011, in relation to the place of residence on the same date five years earlier. Persons who have not moved are referred to as non-movers and persons who have moved from one residence to another are referred to as movers. Movers include non-migrants and migrants. Non-migrants are persons who did move but remained in the same city, town, township, village or Indian reserve. Migrants include internal migrants who moved to a different city, town, township, village or Indian reserve within Canada. External migrants include persons who lived outside Canada at the earlier reference date.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 69 referrer

Footnote 70

'Highest certificate, diploma or degree' refers to the highest certificate, diploma or degree completed based on a hierarchy which is generally related to the amount of time spent 'in-class.' For postsecondary completers, a university education is considered to be a higher level of schooling than a college education, while a college education is considered to be a higher level of education than in the trades. Although some trades requirements may take as long or longer to complete than a given college or university program, the majority of time is spent in on-the-job paid training and less time is spent in the classroom. For further definitions, refer to the National Household Survey Dictionary, Catalogue no. 99-000-X. For any comments on collection, dissemination or data quality for this variable, refer to the Education Reference Guide, National Household Survey, Catalogue no. 99-012-X2011006.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 70 referrer

Footnote 71

'High school diploma or equivalent' includes persons who have graduated from a secondary school or equivalent. It excludes persons with a postsecondary certificate, diploma or degree.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 71 referrer

Footnote 72

'Postsecondary certificate, diploma or degree' includes 'apprenticeship or trades certificates or diplomas,' 'college, CEGEP or other non-university certificates or diplomas' and university certificates, diplomas and degrees.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 72 referrer

Footnote 73

'Apprenticeship or trades certificate or diploma' includes Registered Apprenticeship certificates (including Certificate of Qualification, Journeyperson's designation) and other trades certificates or diplomas such as pre-employment or vocational certificates and diplomas from brief trade programs completed at community colleges, institutes of technology, vocational centres, and similar institutions.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 73 referrer

Footnote 74

Comparisons with other data sources suggest that the category 'University certificate or diploma below the bachelor's level' was over-reported in the NHS. This category likely includes some responses that are actually college certificates or diplomas, bachelor's degrees or other types of education (e.g., university transfer programs, bachelor's programs completed in other countries, incomplete bachelor's programs, non-university professional designations). We recommend users interpret the results for the 'University certificate or diploma below the bachelor's level' category with caution.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 74 referrer

Footnote 75

'University certificate, diploma or degree above bachelor level' includes the categories 'University certificate or diploma above bachelor level,' 'Degree in medicine, dentistry, veterinary medicine or optometry,' 'Master's degree' and 'Earned doctorate.'

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 75 referrer

Footnote 76

'Major field of study' is defined as the main discipline or subject of learning. It is collected for the highest certificate, diploma or degree above the high school or secondary school level and classified according to the Classification of Instructional Programs (CIP) Canada 2011. This variable shows the 'primary groupings,' a CIP variant. For more information on the CIP classification, see the Classification of Instructional Programs, Canada 2011, Catalogue no. 12-590-X available from: www.statcan.gc.ca/concepts/classification-eng.htm. For any comments on collection, dissemination or data quality for this variable, refer to the Education Reference Guide, National Household Survey, Catalogue no. 99-012-X2011006.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 76 referrer

Footnote 77

'No postsecondary certificate, diploma or degree' includes persons who have not completed a registered apprenticeship certificate (including Certificate of Qualification, Journeyperson's designation) or other trades certificate or diploma, a college, CEGEP or other non-university certificate or diploma, or a university certificate, diploma or degree.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 77 referrer

Footnote 78

Called 'Health, parks, recreation and fitness' in CIP Canada 2000.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 78 referrer

Footnote 79

Includes 'Multidisciplinary/interdisciplinary studies, other.'

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 79 referrer

Footnote 80

'Location of study compared with province or territory of residence' indicates whether the 'Location of study' is the same as the province or territory of residence in 2011, a different Canadian province or territory, or outside Canada. 'Location of study' refers to the province, territory or country of the institution where the highest certificate, diploma or degree above the high school level was completed. Users should be aware that some respondents may have reported the physical location of study rather than the location of the certificate, diploma or degree-granting institution. This could affect the responses of those who obtained a certificate, diploma or degree through a joint program or by distance learning with credentials granted in another province or country. In particular, a number of persons reported a location of study for a university credential in one of the territories (Yukon, Northwest Territories, Nunavut), even though there were no educational institutions in the territories with the authority to grant university degrees. For any other comments on collection, dissemination or data quality for this variable or 'Location of study,' refer to the Education Reference Guide, National Household Survey, Catalogue no. 99-012-X2011006.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 80 referrer

Footnote 81

Population by language used most often at work . Refers to the language used most often at work, as reported on May 10, 2011 by the individuals aged 15 years and over who worked since January 1, 2010.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 81 referrer

Footnote 82

Cree languages include the following categories: Cree not otherwise specified (which refers to those who reported 'Cree'), Swampy Cree, Plains Cree, Woods Cree, and a category labelled 'Cree not included elsewhere' (which includes Moose Cree, Northern East Cree and Southern East Cree).

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 82 referrer

Footnote 83

Refers to whether a person was employed, unemployed or not in the labour force during the week of Sunday, May 1 to Saturday, May 7, 2011. In the past, this variable was called Labour force activity.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 83 referrer

Footnote 84

Refers to whether an employed person is an employee or is self-employed. The self-employed include persons with or without a business, as well as unpaid family workers. 

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 84 referrer

Footnote 85

Includes unemployed persons aged 15 years and over who have never worked for pay or in self-employment or who had last worked prior to January 1, 2010 only.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 85 referrer

Footnote 86

Experienced labour force refers to persons who, during the week of Sunday, May 1 to Saturday, May 7, 2011, were employed and the unemployed who had last worked for pay or in self-employment in either 2010 or 2011.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 86 referrer

Footnote 87

Includes self-employed with an incorporated business and self-employed with an unincorporated business. Also included among the self-employed are unpaid family workers.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 87 referrer

Footnote 88

Refers to the kind of work performed by persons during the week of Sunday, May 1 to Saturday, May 7, 2011, as determined by their kind of work and the description of the main activities in their job. The 2011 National Household Survey occupation data are produced according to the NOC 2011. 

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 88 referrer

Footnote 89

Unemployed persons aged 15 years and over who have never worked for pay or in self-employment or who had last worked prior to January 1, 2010 only.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 89 referrer

Footnote 90

Refers to the general nature of the business carried out in the establishment where the person worked. The 2011 National Household Survey industry data are produced according to the NAICS 2007.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 90 referrer

Footnote 91

Refers to the number of weeks in which a person worked for pay or in self-employment in 2010 at all jobs held, even if only for a few hours, and whether these weeks were mostly full time (30 hours or more per week) or mostly part time (less than 30 hours per week).

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 91 referrer

Footnote 92

Includes persons who never worked, persons who worked prior to 2010 only, or persons who worked in 2011 only.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 92 referrer

Footnote 93

Refers to persons who worked for pay or in self-employment in 2010. These persons were asked to report whether the weeks they worked in 2010 were full-time weeks (30 hours or more per week) or not, on the basis of all jobs held. Persons with a part-time job for part of the year and a full-time job for another part of the year were to report the information for the job at which they worked the most weeks.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 93 referrer

Footnote 94

Classification of respondents according to whether they worked at home, worked outside Canada, had no fixed workplace address or worked at a specific address (usual place of work).

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 94 referrer

Footnote 95

Refers to the main mode of transportation a respondent uses to travel between his or her home and his or her place of work.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 95 referrer

Footnote 96

Refers to how many minutes it took for a person to travel from home to work. Median commuting duration is the value which divides the commuting duration into two equal halves, i.e., the commuting duration of individuals for the first half is below the median, while the commuting distance of individuals for the second half is above the median.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 96 referrer

Footnote 97

Time at which a respondent usually leaves home to go to work.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 97 referrer

Footnote 98

Condition of dwelling - Refers to whether the dwelling is in need of repairs. This does not include desirable remodelling or additions.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 98 referrer

Footnote 99

Period of construction - Refers to the period in time during which the building or dwelling was originally constructed.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 99 referrer

Footnote 100

Includes data up to May 10, 2011.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 100 referrer

Footnote 101

Rooms - Refers to enclosed areas within a private dwelling which are finished and suitable for year round living. The number of rooms of a private dwelling includes kitchens, bedrooms and finished rooms in the attic or basement. The number of rooms of a private dwelling excludes bathrooms, halls, vestibules and rooms used solely for business purposes. Partially divided rooms are considered to be separate rooms if they are considered as such by the respondent (e.g., L-shaped dining room and living room arrangements).

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 101 referrer

Footnote 102

Bedrooms - Refers to rooms in a private dwelling that are designed mainly for sleeping purposes even if they are now used for other purposes, such as guest rooms and television rooms. Also included are rooms used as bedrooms now, even if they were not originally built as bedrooms, such as bedrooms in a finished basement. Bedrooms exclude rooms designed for another use during the day such as dining rooms and living rooms even if they may be used for sleeping purposes at night. By definition, one-room private dwellings such as studio apartments have zero bedrooms.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 102 referrer

Footnote 103

Tenure - Refers to whether the household owns or rents their private dwelling, or whether the dwelling is band housing (on an Indian reserve or settlement).

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 103 referrer

Footnote 104

Condominium status - Refers to whether the private dwelling is part of a condominium development. A condominium is a residential complex in which dwellings are owned individually while land and common elements are held in joint ownership with others.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 104 referrer

Footnote 105

Household maintainer - Refers to whether or not a person residing in the household is responsible for paying the rent, or the mortgage, or the taxes, or the electricity or other services or utilities. Where a number of people may contribute to the payments, more than one person in the household may be identified as a household maintainer. If no person in the household is identified as making such payments, the reference person is identified by default.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 105 referrer

Footnote 106

Primary household maintainer - First person in the household identified as someone who pays the rent or the mortgage, or the taxes, or the electricity bill, and so on, for the dwelling. The order of the persons in a household is determined by the order in which the respondent lists the persons on the questionnaire. Generally, an adult is listed first followed, if applicable, by that person's spouse or common-law partner and by their children. The order does not necessarily correspond to the proportion of household payments made by the person. Age - Refers to the age at last birthday before the reference date, that is, before May 10, 2011.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 106 referrer

Footnote 107

Persons per room - Refers to an indicator of the level of crowding in a private dwelling. It is calculated by dividing the number of persons in the household by the number of rooms in the dwelling.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 107 referrer

Footnote 108

Housing suitability - Housing suitability refers to whether a private household is living in suitable accommodations according to the National Occupancy Standard (NOS); that is, whether the dwelling has enough bedrooms for the size and composition of the household. A household is deemed to be living in suitable accommodations if its dwelling has enough bedrooms, as calculated using the National Occupancy Standard. Housing suitability assesses the required number of bedrooms for a household based on the age, sex, and relationships among household members. An alternative variable, the number of persons per room, considers all rooms in a private dwelling and the number of household members. Housing suitability and the National Occupancy Standard (NOS) on which it is based were developed by Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) through consultations with provincial housing agencies.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 108 referrer

Footnote 109

Shelter-cost-to-income ratio - Percentage of a household's average total monthly income which is spent on shelter-related expenses. Those expenses include the monthly rent (for tenants) or the mortgage payment, property taxes and condominium fees (for owners) and the costs of electricity, heat, municipal services, etc. The percentage is calculated by dividing the total shelter-related expenses by the household's total monthly income and multiplying the result by 100. Includes owner and tenant households in non-farm, non-reserve private dwellings with household total income greater than zero in 2010 (i.e., excludes negative or zero household total income). The relatively high shelter costs to household income ratios for some households may have resulted from the difference in the reference period for shelter costs and household total income data. The reference period for shelter cost data is 2011, while household total income is reported for the year 2010. As well, for some households, the 2010 household total income may represent income for only part of a year. Household total income - The total income of a household is the sum of the total incomes of all members of that household. Total income refers to the total of income from all sources, including employment income, income from government programs, pension income, investment income and any other money income, before income taxes and deductions, during the calendar year 2010.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 109 referrer

Footnote 110

Presence of mortgage - Refers to whether the owner households reported mortgage or loan payments for their dwelling.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 110 referrer

Footnote 111

Shelter-cost-to-income ratio for owner households - Percentage of an owner household's average total monthly income which is spent on shelter-related expenses. Those expenses include the mortgage payment, property taxes and condominium fees and the costs of electricity, heat, municipal services, etc. The percentage is calculated by dividing the total shelter-related expenses by the household's total monthly income and multiplying the result by 100. Includes owner households in non-farm, non-reserve private dwellings with household total income greater than zero in 2010 (i.e., excludes negative or zero household total income). The relatively high shelter costs to household income ratios for some households may have resulted from the difference in the reference period for shelter costs and household total income data. The reference period for shelter cost data is 2011, while household total income is reported for the year 2010. As well, for some households, the 2010 household total income may represent income for only part of a year. Household total income - The total income of a household is the sum of the total incomes of all members of that household. Total income refers to the total of income from all sources, including employment income, income from government programs, pension income, investment income and any other money income, before income taxes and deductions, during the calendar year 2010.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 111 referrer

Footnote 112

Shelter cost for owned dwellings - Includes all shelter expenses paid by households that own their dwellings, such as the mortgage payment and the costs of electricity, heat, water and other municipal services, property taxes and condominium fees.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 112 referrer

Footnote 113

Value of dwelling - Refers to the dollar amount expected by the owner if the dwelling were to be sold.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 113 referrer

Footnote 114

Subsidized housing - Refers to whether the dwelling is subsidized. Subsidized housing includes rent geared to income, social housing, public housing, government-assisted housing, non-profit housing, rent supplements and housing allowances.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 114 referrer

Footnote 115

Shelter-cost-to-income ratio for tenant households - Percentage of a tenant household's average total monthly income which is spent on shelter-related expenses. Those expenses include the monthly rent and the costs of electricity, heat, municipal services, etc. The percentage is calculated by dividing the total shelter-related expenses by the household's total monthly income and multiplying the result by 100. Includes tenant households in non-farm, non-reserve private dwellings with household total income greater than zero in 2010 (i.e., excludes negative or zero household total income). The relatively high shelter costs to household income ratios for some households may have resulted from the difference in the reference period for shelter costs and household total income data. The reference period for shelter cost data is 2011, while household total income is reported for the year 2010. As well, for some households, the 2010 household total income may represent income for only part of a year. Household total income - The total income of a household is the sum of the total incomes of all members of that household. Total income refers to the total of income from all sources, including employment income, income from government programs, pension income, investment income and any other money income, before income taxes and deductions, during the calendar year 2010.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 115 referrer

Footnote 116

Shelter costs for rented dwellings - Includes all shelter expenses paid by households that rent their dwellings, such as the monthly rent and the costs of electricity, heat and municipal services.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 116 referrer

Footnote 117

Total income - Total income refers to monetary receipts from certain sources, before income taxes and deductions, during calendar year 2010. It includes employment income from wages, salaries, tips, commissions and net income from self-employment (for both unincorporated farm and non-farm activities); income from government sources, such as social assistance, child benefits, employment insurance, old age security pension, Canada or Quebec pension plan benefits and disability income; income from employer and personal pension sources, such as private pensions and payments from annuities and RRIFs; income from investment sources, such as dividends and interest on bonds, accounts, GICs and mutual funds; and other regular cash income, such as child support payments received, spousal support payments (alimony) received and scholarships. The monetary receipts included are those that tend to be of a regular and recurring nature. It excludes one-time receipts, such as lottery winnings, gambling winnings, cash inheritances, lump sum insurance settlements, capital gains and RRSP withdrawals. Capital gains are excluded because they are not by their nature regular and recurring. It is further assumed that they are less likely to be fully spent in the period in which they are received, unlike income that is regular and recurring. Also excluded are employer's contributions to registered pension plans, Canada and Quebec pension plans, and employment insurance. Finally, voluntary inter-household transfers, imputed rent, goods and services produced for barter, and goods produced for own consumption are excluded from this total income definition. Median income of individuals - The median income of a specified group of income recipients is that amount which divides their income size distribution into two halves, i.e., the incomes of the first half of individuals are below the median, while those of the second half are above the median. Median income is calculated from the individuals with income in that group (e.g., males aged 45 to 54 years). Average income of individuals - Average income of individuals refers to the weighted mean total income of individuals aged 15 years and over who reported income for 2010. Average income is calculated from unrounded data by dividing the aggregate income of a specified group of individuals (e.g., males aged 45 to 54 years) by the number of individuals with income in that group. Median and average of individuals will be calculated for those individuals who are at least aged 15 years and who have an income (positive or negative). Age - Refers to the age at last birthday before the reference date, that is, before May 10, 2011.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 117 referrer

Footnote 118

Including loss.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 118 referrer

Footnote 119

For population with income.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 119 referrer

Footnote 120

After-tax income - Refers to total income from all sources minus federal, provincial and territorial income taxes paid for 2010. Median income of individuals - The median income of a specified group of income recipients is that amount which divides their income size distribution into two halves, i.e., the incomes of the first half of individuals are below the median, while those of the second half are above the median. Median income is calculated from the individuals with income in that group (e.g., males aged 45 to 54 years). Average income of individuals - Average income of individuals refers to the weighted mean total income of individuals aged 15 years and over who reported income for 2010. Average income is calculated from unrounded data by dividing the aggregate income of a specified group of individuals (e.g., males aged 45 to 54 years) by the number of individuals with income in that group. Median and average of individuals will be calculated for those individuals who are at least aged 15 years and who have an income (positive or negative). Age - Refers to the age at last birthday before the reference date, that is, before May 10, 2011.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 120 referrer

Footnote 121

Including loss.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 121 referrer

Footnote 122

For population with after-tax income.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 122 referrer

Footnote 123

Composition of income - The composition of the total income of a population group or a geographic area refers to the relative share of each income source or group of sources, expressed as a percentage of the aggregate total income of that group or area. Total income - Total of income from all sources, including employment income, income from government programs, pension income, investment income and any other money income. Age - Refers to the age at last birthday before the reference date, that is, before May 10, 2011.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 123 referrer

Footnote 124

Market income - Refers to the sum of employment income (wages and salaries, net farm income and net income from non-farm unincorporated business and/or professional practice), investment income, retirement pensions, superannuation and annuities (including those from RRSPs and RRIFs) and other money income. It is equivalent to total income before tax minus all government transfers and is also referred to as income before transfers and taxes.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 124 referrer

Footnote 125

Earnings or employment income - Total wages and salaries and net income from self-employment.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 125 referrer

Footnote 126

Wages and salaries - Refers to gross wages and salaries before deductions for such items as income tax, pensions and Employment Insurance. Included in this source are military pay and allowances, tips, commissions and cash bonuses, benefits from wage-loss replacement plans or income-maintenance insurance plans, supplementary unemployment benefits from an employer or union as well as all types of casual earnings during calendar year 2010. Other employment income such as taxable benefits, research grants and royalties are included.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 126 referrer

Footnote 127

Self-employment net income - Refers to the total amount received by persons aged 15 years and over during calendar year 2010 as net farm income from self-employment, or net non-farm income from unincorporated business and/or professional practice. Net farm income - Refers to net income (gross receipts from farm sales minus depreciation and cost of operation) received during calendar year 2010 from the operation of a farm, either on the respondent's own account or in partnership. In the case of partnerships, only the respondent's share of income was reported. Included with gross receipts are cash advances received in 2010, dividends from cooperatives, rebates and farm-support payments to farmers from federal, provincial and regional agricultural programs (for example, milk subsidies and marketing board payments) and gross insurance proceeds such as payments from the AgriInvest and AgriStability programs. The value of income 'in kind,' such as agricultural products produced and consumed on the farm, is excluded. Net non-farm income from unincorporated business and/or professional practice - Refers to net income (gross receipts minus expenses of operation such as wages, rents and depreciation) received during calendar year 2010 from the respondent's non-farm unincorporated business or professional practice. In the case of partnerships, only the respondent's share was reported. Also included is net income from persons babysitting in their own homes, persons providing room and board to non-relatives, self-employed fishers, hunters and trappers, operators of direct distributorships such as those selling and delivering cosmetics, as well as freelance activities of artists, writers, music teachers, hairdressers, dressmakers, etc.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 127 referrer

Footnote 128

Investment income - Refers to interest received during calendar year 2010 from deposits in banks, trust companies, cooperatives, credit unions, caisses populaires, etc., as well as interest on savings certificates, bonds and debentures, and all dividends from both Canadian and foreign corporate stocks and mutual funds. Also included is other investment income from either Canadian or foreign sources, such as net rents from real estate, mortgage and loan interest received, regular income from an estate or trust fund, and interest from insurance policies. Does not include capital gains or losses.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 128 referrer

Footnote 129

Retirement pensions - Refers to all regular income received by the respondent during calendar year 2010 as the result of having been a member of a pension plan of one or more employers. It includes payments received from all annuities, including payments from a Registered Retirement Income Fund (RRIF), a matured Registered Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP) in the form of a life annuity, a fixed-term annuity, or an income-averaging annuity contract; pensions paid to widow(er)s or other relatives of deceased pensioners; pensions of retired civil servants, Armed Forces personnel and Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) officers; annuity payments received from the Canadian Government Annuities Fund, an insurance company, etc. Does not include lump-sum death benefits, lump-sum benefits or withdrawals from a pension plan or RRSP, or refunds of over-contributions.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 129 referrer

Footnote 130

Other money income - Refers to regular cash income received during calendar year 2010 and not reported in any of the other sources listed on the questionnaire. For example, severance pay and retirement allowances, alimony, child support, periodic support from other persons not in the household, income from abroad (excluding dividends and interest), non refundable scholarships, bursaries, fellowships and study grants, and artists' project grants are included.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 130 referrer

Footnote 131

Government transfer payments - Refers to all cash benefits received from federal, provincial, territorial or municipal governments during 2010. This variable is derived by summing the amounts reported in: the Old Age Security pension and Guaranteed Income Supplement, Allowance and Allowance for the Survivor; benefits from Canada Pension Plan or Quebec Pension Plan; benefits from Employment Insurance; child benefits; other income from government sources.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 131 referrer

Footnote 132

Benefits from Canada or Quebec pension plan - Refers to benefits received during calendar year 2010 from the Canada or Quebec Pension Plan (For example, retirement pensions, survivors' benefits and disability pensions). Does not include lump-sum death benefits.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 132 referrer

Footnote 133

Old Age Security pensions and Guaranteed Income Supplement - Refers to Old Age Security pensions and Guaranteed Income Supplements paid to persons aged 65 years and over, and to the Allowance or Allowance for the survivor paid to 60- to 64-year-old spouses of old age security recipients or widow(er)s by the federal government during the calendar year 2010.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 133 referrer

Footnote 134

Benefits from employment insurance - Refers to total Employment Insurance benefits received during calendar year 2010, before income tax deductions. It includes benefits for unemployment, sickness, maternity, paternity, adoption, work sharing, retraining and benefits to self-employed fishers received under the federal Employment Insurance Program or the Quebec Parental Insurance Program.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 134 referrer

Footnote 135

Child benefits - Refers to payments received under the Canada Child Tax Benefit program during calendar year 2010 by parents with dependent children under 18 years of age. Included with the Canada Child Tax Benefit is the National Child Benefit Supplement (NCBS) for low-income families with children. The NCBS is the federal contribution to the National Child Benefit (NCB), a joint initiative of federal, provincial and territorial governments. Also included in this variable are child benefits, child disability benefits and earned income supplements provided by certain provinces and territories and the Universal Child Care Benefit (UCCB).

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 135 referrer

Footnote 136

Other income from government sources - Refers to all transfer payments, excluding those covered as a separate income source (Canada Pension Plan or Quebec Pension Plan benefits, Old Age Security pensions and Guaranteed Income Supplements, Employment Insurance benefits and child benefits) received from federal, provincial, territorial or municipal programs during 2010.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 136 referrer

Footnote 137

Income tax paid - Refers to all federal, provincial and territorial taxes paid on 2010 income. Federal, provincial and territorial taxes paid refer to taxes on income, after taking into account exemptions, deductions, non-refundable tax credits and the Quebec abatement. These taxes are obtained from the income tax files for persons who allowed access to their income tax data and from direct responses on the questionnaire for others.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 137 referrer

Footnote 138

After-tax income - Refers to total income from all sources minus federal, provincial and territorial taxes paid for 2010.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 138 referrer

Footnote 139

Net capital gains or losses - Refers to the net gains received or losses incurred during calendar year 2010 from the sale of capital property. This represents the proceeds of disposition minus the adjusted cost base of the property and outlays and expenses incurred to sell the property. Capital property includes depreciable property and any property which, if sold, would result in a capital gain or loss (for example, cottages, buildings and securities such as mutual funds). Non-taxable capital gains or losses on the sale of a principal residence are excluded. Net capital gains or losses are not included in the definition of Total income as published in standard products. Net capital gains or losses are not included in the concept of total income but are expressed here as a percentage to obtain a relative measure of size.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 139 referrer

Footnote 140

Earnings or employment income - Refers to total income received by persons 15 years of age and over during calendar year 2010 as wages and salaries, net income from a non-farm unincorporated business and/or professional practice, and/or net farm self-employment income. Wages and salaries - Refers to gross wages and salaries before deductions for such items as income tax, pensions and Employment Insurance. Included in this source are military pay and allowances, tips, commissions and cash bonuses, benefits from wage-loss replacement plans or income-maintenance insurance plans, supplementary unemployment benefits from an employer or union as well as all types of casual earnings during calendar year 2010. Other employment income such as taxable benefits, research grants and royalties are included. Net non-farm income from unincorporated business or professional practice - Refers to net income (gross receipts minus expenses of operation such as wages, rents and depreciation) received during calendar year 2010 from the respondent's non-farm unincorporated business or professional practice. In the case of partnerships, only the respondent's share was reported. Also included is net income from persons babysitting in their own homes, persons providing room and board to non-relatives, self-employed fishers, hunters and trappers, operators of direct distributorships such as those selling and delivering cosmetics, as well as freelance activities of artists, writers, music teachers, hairdressers, dressmakers, etc. Net farm income - Refers to net income (gross receipts from farm sales minus depreciation and cost of operation) received during calendar year 2010 from the operation of a farm, either on the respondent's own account or in partnership. In the case of partnerships, only the respondent's share of income was reported. Included with gross receipts are cash advances received in 2010, dividends from cooperatives, rebates and farm-support payments to farmers from federal, provincial and regional agricultural programs (for example, milk subsidies and marketing board payments) and gross insurance proceeds such as payments from the AgriInvest and AgriStability programs. The value of income 'in kind,' such as agricultural products produced and consumed on the farm, is excluded. Median income of individuals - The median income of a specified group of income recipients is that amount which divides their income size distribution, ranked by size of income, into two halves, i.e., the incomes of the first half of individuals are below the median, while those of the second half are above the median. Median income is calculated from the unrounded number of individuals (e.g., males aged 45 to 54 years) with income in that group. Average income of individuals - Average income of individuals refers to the weighted mean total income of individuals aged 15 years and over who reported income for 2010. Average income is calculated from unrounded data by dividing the aggregate income of a specified group of individuals (e.g., males aged 45 to 54 years) by the number of individuals with income in that group. Median and average incomes of individuals will be calculated for those individuals who are at least aged 15 years and who have an income (positive or negative). The above concept and procedures also apply in the calculation of these statistics for earnings. Work activity in 2010 - Refers to the number of weeks in which a person worked for pay or in self-employment in 2010 at all jobs held, even if only for a few hours, and whether these weeks were mostly full time (30 hours or more per week) or mostly part time (less than 30 hours per week). Age - Refers to the age at last birthday before the reference date, that is, before May 10, 2011.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 140 referrer

Footnote 141

Economic family total income - The total income of an economic family is the sum of the total incomes of all members of that family. Total income - Total income refers to monetary receipts from certain sources, before income taxes and deductions, during calendar year 2010. It includes employment income from wages, salaries, tips, commissions and net income from self-employment (for both unincorporated farm and non-farm activities); income from government sources, such as social assistance, child benefits, employment insurance, old age security pension, Canada or Quebec pension plan benefits and disability income; income from employer and personal pension sources, such as private pensions and payments from annuities and RRIFs; income from investment sources, such as dividends and interest on bonds, accounts, GICs and mutual funds; and other regular cash income, such as child support payments received, spousal support payments (alimony) received and scholarships. The monetary receipts included are those that tend to be of a regular and recurring nature. It excludes one-time receipts, such as lottery winnings, gambling winnings, cash inheritances, lump sum insurance settlements, capital gains and RRSP withdrawals. Capital gains are excluded because they are not by their nature regular and recurring. It is further assumed that they are less likely to be fully spent in the period in which they are received, unlike income that is regular and recurring. Also excluded are employer's contributions to registered pension plans, Canada and Quebec pension plans, and employment insurance. Finally, voluntary inter-household transfers, imputed rent, goods and services produced for barter, and goods produced for own consumption are excluded from this total income definition. After-tax income of economic families - The after-tax income of an economic family is the sum of the after-tax incomes of all members of that family. After-tax income of family members or persons not in families refers to total income from all sources minus federal, provincial and territorial income taxes paid for 2010. Median income of economic families - The median income of a specified group of families is that amount which divides their income size distribution, ranked by size of income, into two halves. That is, the incomes of the first half of the families are below the median, while those of the second half are above the median. Median incomes of families are normally calculated for all units in the specified group, whether or not they reported income. Average income of economic families - Average income of economic families refers to the weighted mean total income of families in 2010. Average income is calculated from unrounded data by dividing the aggregate income of a specified group of families (for example, husband-wife families with working wives) by the number of families in that group, whether or not they reported income. The above concept and procedures also apply in the calculation of these statistics on the after-tax income of economic families. Economic family - Refers to a group of two or more persons who live in the same dwelling and are related to each other by blood, marriage, common-law, adoption or a foster relationship. A couple may be of opposite or same sex.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 141 referrer

Footnote 142

Economic family structure - Refers to the classification of economic families as couple families, lone-parent families or other economic families. Couple families - Those in which a member of either a married or common-law couple is the economic family reference person. Lone-parent families - Those in which either a male or female lone parent is the economic family reference person. Other economic families - Those in which the economic family reference person has other relatives but does not have a married spouse or common-law partner or a child in their census family.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 142 referrer

Footnote 143

Economic family structure - Refers to the classification of economic families as couple families, lone-parent families or other economic families. Couple families - Those in which a member of either a married or common-law couple is the economic family reference person. Lone-parent families - Those in which either a male or female lone parent is the economic family reference person. Other economic families - Those in which the economic family reference person has other relatives but does not have a married spouse or common-law partner or a child in their census family. Presence of children - Refers to the number of children in private households by age groups. To be included, children must live in the same household as the family, without a married spouse, common-law partner or one or more of their children living in the same household. In a census family, they may be children by birth, marriage or adoption. In an economic family, foster children are also included.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 143 referrer

Footnote 144

Economic family structure - Refers to the classification of economic families as couple families, lone-parent families or other economic families. Couple families - Those in which a member of either a married or common-law couple is the economic family reference person. Lone-parent families - Those in which either a male or female lone parent is the economic family reference person. Other economic families - Those in which the economic family reference person has other relatives but does not have a married spouse or common-law partner or a child in their census family.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 144 referrer

Footnote 145

Total income - Total income refers to monetary receipts from certain sources, before income taxes and deductions, during calendar year 2010. It includes employment income from wages, salaries, tips, commissions and net income from self-employment (for both unincorporated farm and non-farm activities); income from government sources, such as social assistance, child benefits, employment insurance, old age security pension, Canada or Quebec pension plan benefits and disability income; income from employer and personal pension sources, such as private pensions and payments from annuities and RRIFs; income from investment sources, such as dividends and interest on bonds, accounts, GICs and mutual funds; and other regular cash income, such as child support payments received, spousal support payments (alimony) received and scholarships. The monetary receipts included are those that tend to be of a regular and recurring nature. It excludes one-time receipts, such as lottery winnings, gambling winnings, cash inheritances, lump sum insurance settlements, capital gains and RRSP withdrawals. Capital gains are excluded because they are not by their nature regular and recurring. It is further assumed that they are less likely to be fully spent in the period in which they are received, unlike income that is regular and recurring. Also excluded are employer's contributions to registered pension plans, Canada and Quebec pension plans, and employment insurance. Finally, voluntary inter-household transfers, imputed rent, goods and services produced for barter, and goods produced for own consumption are excluded from this total income definition. After-tax income - Refers to total income from all sources minus federal, provincial and territorial income taxes paid for 2010. Median income of persons not in economic families - The median income of a specified group of persons not in economic families (for example, males aged 55 to 64) is that amount which divides their income size distribution, ranked by size of income, into two halves. That is, the incomes of the first half of the persons are below the median, while those of the second half are above the median. Median incomes of persons not in economic families are normally calculated for all units in the specified group, whether or not they reported income. Average income of persons not in economic families - Average income of persons not in economic families refers to the weighted mean total income of the persons not in economic families in 2010. Average income is calculated from unrounded data by dividing the aggregate income of a specified group of persons not in economic families by the number of persons in that group, whether or not they reported income. The above concept and procedures also apply in the calculation of these statistics on the after-tax income of persons not in economic families. Age - Refers to the age at last birthday before the reference date, that is, before May 10, 2011. Economic family persons refer to two or more household members who are related to each other by blood, marriage, common-law, adoption or a foster relationship, and thereby constitute an economic family. Persons not in economic families refer to household members who do not belong to an economic family, including persons living alone.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 145 referrer

Footnote 146

Calculation includes persons not in economic families without income (with an income of zero).

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 146 referrer

Footnote 147

Calculation includes persons not in economic families without after-tax income (with an after-tax income of zero).

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 147 referrer

Footnote 148

Adjusted after-tax income for economic families and persons not in economic families - For economic family members, this refers to economic family after-tax income that has been adjusted by a factor that accounts for family size. The adjustment factor takes into account the lower relative needs of additional family members, as compared to a single person living alone. For use with the NHS income data, the adjusted after-tax income is computed as the economic family after-tax income divided by the square root of family size. For persons not in economic families, the adjusted after-tax income is set at after-tax income. This is equivalent to a factor of 1.0 for a person not in an economic family. Decile of adjusted after-tax family income - The deciles divide the population ranked by size of adjusted after-tax family income into 10 groups of equal size. The population in the bottom decile is the one who falls in the lower 10 percent of the adjusted after-tax family income distribution. The population in the top decile is the one who falls in the highest ten percent of the adjusted after-tax family income distribution. The 10 groups were formed with the full population in private households of Canada, whether or not they reported income.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 148 referrer

Footnote 149

Household total income - The total income of a household is the sum of the total incomes of all members of that household. Total income - Total income refers to monetary receipts from certain sources, before income taxes and deductions, during calendar year 2010. It includes employment income from wages, salaries, tips, commissions and net income from self-employment (for both unincorporated farm and non-farm activities); income from government sources, such as social assistance, child benefits, employment insurance, old age security pension, Canada or Quebec pension plan benefits and disability income; income from employer and personal pension sources, such as private pensions and payments from annuities and RRIFs; income from investment sources, such as dividends and interest on bonds, accounts, GICs and mutual funds; and other regular cash income, such as child support payments received, spousal support payments (alimony) received and scholarships. The monetary receipts included are those that tend to be of a regular and recurring nature. It excludes one-time receipts, such as lottery winnings, gambling winnings, cash inheritances, lump sum insurance settlements, capital gains and RRSP withdrawals. Capital gains are excluded because they are not by their nature regular and recurring. It is further assumed that they are less likely to be fully spent in the period in which they are received, unlike income that is regular and recurring. Also excluded are employer's contributions to registered pension plans, Canada and Quebec pension plans, and employment insurance. Finally, voluntary inter-household transfers, imputed rent, goods and services produced for barter, and goods produced for own consumption are excluded from this total income definition. Household, private - Refers to a person or a group of persons (other than foreign residents) who occupy the same private dwelling and do not have a usual place of residence elsewhere in Canada. Household members who are temporarily absent on May 10, 2011 (e.g., temporarily residing elsewhere) are considered as part of their usual household. Every person is a member of one and only one household.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 149 referrer

Footnote 150

After-tax income of households - The after-tax income of a household is the sum of the after-tax incomes of all members of that household. After-tax income - Refers to total income from all sources minus federal, provincial and territorial income taxes paid for 2010. Household, private - Refers to a person or a group of persons (other than foreign residents) who occupy the same private dwelling and do not have a usual place of residence elsewhere in Canada. Household members who are temporarily absent on May 10, 2011 (e.g., temporarily residing elsewhere) are considered as part of their usual household. Every person is a member of one and only one household.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 150 referrer

Footnote 151

Household total income - The total income of a household is the sum of the total incomes of all members of that household. After-tax income of households - The after-tax income of a household is the sum of the after-tax incomes of all members of that household. Total income - Total of income from all sources, including employment income, income from government programs, pension income, investment income and any other money income. After-tax income - Refers to total income from all sources minus federal, provincial and territorial income taxes paid for 2010. Median income of households - The median income of a specified group of households is that amount which divides their income size distribution, ranked by size of income, into two halves. That is, the incomes of the first half of the households are below the median, while those of the second half are above the median. Median incomes of households are normally calculated for all units in the specified group, whether or not they reported income. Average income of households - Average income of households refers to the weighted mean total income of households in 2010. Average income is calculated from unrounded data by dividing the aggregate income of a specified group of households (for example, two person households) by the number of households in that specific group, whether or not they reported income. The above concept and procedures also apply in the calculation of these statistics on the after-tax income of households. Household, private - Refers to a person or a group of persons (other than foreign residents) who occupy the same private dwelling and do not have a usual place of residence elsewhere in Canada. Household members who are temporarily absent on May 10, 2011 (e.g., temporarily residing elsewhere) are considered as part of their usual household. Every person is a member of one and only one household.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 151 referrer

Footnote 152

Household size - Refers to the number of usual residents in a private household.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 152 referrer

Footnote 153

Income status can be measured in several different ways in household surveys. For the standard products of the National Household Survey, the line chosen is a relative measure: the after-tax low-income measure (LIM-AT). For this measure, the income used is after-tax income of households. There are no regional variations to account for prices or cost of living differences: all applicable households in Canada face the same line adjusted for household size. This line is set at half the median of adjusted household after-tax income. To account for potential economies of scale, the income of households with more than one member is divided by the square root of the size of the household. All household members are considered to share the household income and are attributed the same income status. Note: Low-income estimates in the 2011 National Household Survey. For the 2011 National Household Survey (NHS), low-income statistics are presented based on the after-tax low-income measure (LIM-AT). This measure is not related to the low-income cut-offs (LICO) presented in the 2006 Census and prevalence rates are conceptually not comparable. Because of the sensitivity of certain income indicators to differences in methodology and response patterns, direct comparisons to establish trends with low-income estimates from other household surveys, administrative programs or the 2006 Census are discouraged. The prevalence rates observed in the NHS at the national level are generally 1 to 2 percentage points higher than seen for similar concepts in other programs. However, analysis of the NHS data suggests that it is valid to compare low-income data for different sub-populations within the NHS (i.e., for different geographic areas or demographic groups). For more information, refer to the Income Reference Guide, National Household Survey, Catalogue no. 99-014-X2011006. Age - Refers to the age at last birthday before the reference date, that is, before May 10, 2011.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 153 referrer

How to cite

How to cite: Statistics Canada. 2013. Calgary Southwest, Alberta (Code 48008) (table). National Household Survey (NHS) Profile. 2011 National Household Survey. Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 99-004-XWE. Ottawa. Released September 11, 2013.
http://www12.statcan.gc.ca/nhs-enm/2011/dp-pd/prof/index.cfm?Lang=E (accessed May 16, 2024).

Data source

2011 National Household Survey

NHS data quality

Calgary Southwest, Alberta

Download current NHS table

  •  CSV (approx. 70 kb)
  •  TAB (approx. 70 kb)

Download NHS data for a complete geographic level

Census data

Census data

Select a table view
Census data, Calgary Southwest, Alberta. Table summary
The table shows total, male and female data grouped by geography (appearing as column headers) for selected characteristics (appearing as row headers).
Characteristic Calgary Southwest
Alberta
(Federal electoral district, 2003 Representation Order)
Total Male Female
Population and dwelling counts
Population in 2011Census data footnote 1 136,011 ... ...
Population in 2006Census data footnote 1 120,750 ... ...
2006 to 2011 population change (%) 12.6 ... ...
Total private dwellingsCensus data footnote 2 53,126 ... ...
Private dwellings occupied by usual residentsCensus data footnote 3 51,637 ... ...
Population density per square kilometre 1,773.3 ... ...
Land area (square km) 76.70 ... ...
Age characteristics
Total population by age groupsCensus data footnote 4 136,010 66,960 69,050
0 to 4 years 8,420 4,295 4,120
5 to 9 years 7,425 3,710 3,715
10 to 14 years 7,720 3,995 3,725
15 to 19 years 8,895 4,705 4,190
15 years 1,720 895 820
16 years 1,790 960 830
17 years 1,715 900 815
18 years 1,815 940 875
19 years 1,855 1,005 845
20 to 24 years 9,700 4,980 4,725
25 to 29 years 9,875 4,960 4,915
30 to 34 years 9,710 4,800 4,905
35 to 39 years 10,080 4,895 5,180
40 to 44 years 10,445 5,185 5,260
45 to 49 years 10,990 5,395 5,595
50 to 54 years 11,100 5,355 5,745
55 to 59 years 8,875 4,380 4,495
60 to 64 years 7,070 3,430 3,640
65 to 69 years 4,790 2,235 2,555
70 to 74 years 3,600 1,660 1,945
75 to 79 years 3,030 1,365 1,660
80 to 84 years 2,315 990 1,325
85 years and over 1,980 625 1,350
Median age of the populationCensus data footnote 5 38.1 37.1 39.1
% of the population aged 15 and over 82.7 82.1 83.3
Marital status
Total population 15 years and over by marital statusCensus data footnote 6 112,445 54,955 57,495
Married or living with a common-law partner 68,180 34,120 34,060
Married (and not separated) 59,680 29,860 29,825
Living common law 8,500 4,260 4,235
Not married and not living with a common-law partner 44,265 20,835 23,430
Single (never legally married) 30,295 16,490 13,800
Separated 2,415 1,010 1,410
Divorced 6,900 2,420 4,480
Widowed 4,655 920 3,740
Family characteristics
Total number of census families in private householdsCensus data footnote 7 38,705 ... ...
Size of census family: 2 persons 17,950 ... ...
Size of census family: 3 persons 9,135 ... ...
Size of census family: 4 persons 8,555 ... ...
Size of census family: 5 or more persons 3,065 ... ...
Total number of census families in private householdsCensus data footnote 8 38,705 ... ...
Total couple families by family structure and number of children 33,420 ... ...
Married couples 29,170 ... ...
Without children at home 11,830 ... ...
With children at home 17,340 ... ...
1 child 6,775 ... ...
2 children 7,780 ... ...
3 or more children 2,795 ... ...
Common-law couples 4,250 ... ...
Without children at home 2,785 ... ...
With children at home 1,460 ... ...
1 child 825 ... ...
2 children 455 ... ...
3 or more children 185 ... ...
Total lone-parent families by sex of parent and number of children 5,290 ... ...
Female parent 4,240 ... ...
1 child 2,655 ... ...
2 children 1,235 ... ...
3 or more children 355 ... ...
Male parent 1,045 ... ...
1 child 675 ... ...
2 children 305 ... ...
3 or more children 60 ... ...
Total children in census families in private households 41,590 ... ...
Under six years of age 9,935 ... ...
6 to 14 years 13,475 ... ...
15 to 17 years 5,070 ... ...
18 to 24 years 9,395 ... ...
25 years and over 3,720 ... ...
Average number of children at home per census family 1.1 ... ...
Household and dwelling characteristics
Total number of persons in private households 134,390 66,450 67,940
Number of persons not in census families 20,670 10,050 10,615
Living with relativesCensus data footnote 9 2,935 1,400 1,540
Living with non-relatives only 6,360 3,785 2,575
Living alone 11,380 4,870 6,510
Number of census family persons 113,720 56,395 57,320
Average number of persons per census family 2.9 ... ...
Total number of persons aged 65 years and over in private households 14,335 6,495 7,840
Number of persons not in census families aged 65 years and over 4,190 1,050 3,135
Living with relativesCensus data footnote 9 615 115 500
Living with non-relatives only 240 90 145
Living alone 3,335 845 2,495
Number of census family persons aged 65 years and over 10,145 5,440 4,705
Total number of private households by household typeCensus data footnote 10 51,640 ... ...
Census-family households 37,705 ... ...
One-family-only householdsCensus data footnote 11 34,195 ... ...
Couple-family householdsCensus data footnote 12 30,085 ... ...
Without children 13,075 ... ...
With children 17,010 ... ...
Lone-parent-family households 4,115 ... ...
Other family householdsCensus data footnote 13 3,505 ... ...
One-family households with persons not in a census family 2,560 ... ...
Couple-family householdsCensus data footnote 14 1,820 ... ...
Without children 705 ... ...
With children 1,115 ... ...
Lone-parent-family households 740 ... ...
Two-or-more-family households 945 ... ...
Non-census-family households 13,930 ... ...
One-person households 11,380 ... ...
Two-or-more-person households 2,555 ... ...
Total number of occupied private dwellings by structural type of dwellingCensus data footnote 15 51,640 ... ...
Single-detached house 34,480 ... ...
Apartment, building that has five or more storeys 900 ... ...
Movable dwellingCensus data footnote 16 0 ... ...
Other dwellingCensus data footnote 17 16,260 ... ...
Semi-detached house 2,825 ... ...
Row house 5,450 ... ...
Apartment, duplex 515 ... ...
Apartment, building that has fewer than five storeys 7,465 ... ...
Other single-attached house 5 ... ...
Total number of private households by household sizeCensus data footnote 18 51,635 ... ...
1 person 11,380 ... ...
2 persons 17,525 ... ...
3 persons 9,490 ... ...
4 persons 8,885 ... ...
5 persons 2,975 ... ...
6 or more persons 1,385 ... ...
Number of persons in private households 134,390 ... ...
Average number of persons in private households 2.6 ... ...
Detailed mother tongue
Detailed mother tongue - Total population excluding institutional residentsCensus data footnote 19 134,835 66,560 68,270
  Single responses  131,955 65,210 66,750
    English  96,155 47,995 48,155
    French  2,015 930 1,085
    Non-official languages  33,790 16,285 17,510
      Selected Aboriginal languagesCensus data footnote 20 35 10 30
        Atikamekw    0 0 0
        Cree, n.o.s.  20 5 15
        Dene  0 0 0
        Innu/Montagnais  0 0 0
        Inuktitut  0 0 0
        Mi'kmaq  0 0 0
        Ojibway  5 0 5
        Oji-Cree  5 0 5
        Stoney  5 0 0
Selected non-Aboriginal languagesCensus data footnote 21 33,265 16,020 17,240
        African languages, n.i.e 85 50 35
        Afrikaans  115 60 60
        Akan (Twi)  30 15 15
        Albanian  175 90 85
        Amharic  165 85 80
        Arabic  880 460 420
        Armenian  60 25 35
        Bantu languages, n.i.e 35 20 15
        Bengali  255 135 120
        Berber languages (Kabyle)  0 0 0
        Bisayan languages  275 125 150
        Bosnian  115 50 60
        Bulgarian  115 60 60
        Burmese  15 5 5
        Cantonese  1,055 500 550
        Chinese, n.o.s.  2,700 1,295 1,405
        Creoles  25 10 15
        Croatian  290 140 150
        Czech  245 120 125
        Danish  110 55 55
        Dutch  545 280 270
        Estonian  15 5 10
        Finnish  45 20 20
        Flemish  10 5 5
        Fukien  30 15 20
        German  1,495 710 785
        Greek  195 100 100
        Gujarati  520 260 265
        Hakka  10 0 5
        Hebrew  230 115 115
        Hindi  450 245 200
        Hungarian  660 325 330
        Ilocano  350 155 200
        Indo-Iranian languages, n.i.e 30 10 15
        Italian  375 185 190
        Japanese  215 85 130
        Khmer (Cambodian)  50 25 25
        Korean  910 425 490
        Kurdish  20 20 5
        Lao  20 5 20
        Latvian  10 5 5
        Lingala  0 0 0
        Lithuanian  50 20 25
        Macedonian  45 25 20
        Malay  75 35 40
        Malayalam  120 55 70
        Maltese  0 0 0
        Mandarin  1,905 905 990
        Marathi  85 35 45
        Nepali  40 25 20
        Niger-Congo languages, n.i.e 115 55 55
        Norwegian  30 15 15
        Oromo  20 10 10
        Panjabi (Punjabi)  400 205 190
        Pashto  30 20 15
        Persian (Farsi)  540 295 245
        Polish  1,390 665 730
        Portuguese  305 145 155
        Romanian  1,115 585 530
        Rundi (Kirundi)  15 10 5
        Russian  2,740 1,300 1,440
        Rwanda (Kinyarwanda)  10 5 5
        Semitic languages, n.i.e 20 10 10
        Serbian  455 240 220
        Serbo-Croatian  145 75 75
        Shanghainese  5 0 5
        Sign languages, n.i.e 10 5 5
        Sindhi  70 35 40
        Sinhala (Sinhalese)  135 70 65
        Sino-Tibetan languages, n.i.e 15 5 10
        Slavic languages, n.i.e 10 5 5
        Slovak  220 115 110
        Slovenian  25 15 15
        Somali  40 20 20
        Spanish  3,285 1,635 1,655
        Swahili  55 25 25
        Swedish  35 10 25
        Tagalog (Pilipino, Filipino)  4,580 2,050 2,525
        Taiwanese  20 5 15
        Tamil  200 100 105
        Telugu  70 35 40
        Thai  50 20 30
        Tibetan languages  40 20 20
        Tigrigna  95 45 45
        Turkish  90 55 35
        Ukrainian  635 275 365
        Urdu  595 305 295
        Vietnamese  320 125 205
        Yiddish  65 30 30
      Other languagesCensus data footnote 22 495 255 240
  Multiple responses          2,875 1,355 1,520
    English and French  315 155 155
    English and non-official language  2,400 1,115 1,285
    French and non-official language  115 55 60
    English, French and non-official language 45 25 20
Knowledge of official languages
Knowledge of official languages - Total population excluding institutional residentsCensus data footnote 19 134,835 66,560 68,270
  English only 123,150 61,300 61,850
  French only 135 55 80
  English and French 9,790 4,470 5,320
  Neither English nor French 1,755 735 1,020
First official language spoken
First official language spoken - Total population excluding institutional residentsCensus data footnote 19 134,835 66,565 68,270
  English 130,135 64,430 65,705
  French 2,015 935 1,080
  English and French 985 495 490
  Neither English nor French 1,695 705 995
Official language minority (number)Census data footnote 23 2,505 1,180 1,330
Official language minority (percentage)Census data footnote 23 1.9 1.8 1.9
Detailed language spoken most often at home
Detailed language spoken most often at home - Total population excluding institutional residentsCensus data footnote 19 134,835 66,560 68,270
  Single responses 129,020 63,765 65,255
    English 108,735 53,815 54,920
    French 750 360 395
    Non-official languages 19,535 9,595 9,940
      Selected Aboriginal languagesCensus data footnote 20 5 5 5
        Atikamekw   0 0 0
        Cree, n.o.s. 5 5 5
        Dene 0 0 0
        Innu/Montagnais 0 0 0
        Inuktitut 0 0 0
        Mi'kmaq 0 0 0
        Ojibway 0 0 0
        Oji-Cree 5 0 5
        Stoney 5 5 5
      Selected non-Aboriginal languagesCensus data footnote 21 19,350 9,495 9,855
        African languages, n.i.e. 35 15 15
        Afrikaans 60 30 30
        Akan (Twi) 10 5 5
        Albanian 95 50 50
        Amharic 95 50 50
        Arabic 430 215 215
        Armenian 30 15 15
        Bantu languages, n.i.e. 5 5 5
        Bengali 180 95 85
        Berber languages (Kabyle) 0 0 0
        Bisayan languages 100 55 50
        Bosnian 60 30 30
        Bulgarian 80 35 40
        Burmese 15 10 10
        Cantonese 765 360 410
        Chinese, n.o.s. 1,880 930 950
        Creoles 15 5 10
        Croatian 115 60 55
        Czech 75 40 40
        Danish 15 5 5
        Dutch 70 40 35
        Estonian 5 0 5
        Finnish 10 5 5
        Flemish 0 0 0
        Fukien 10 0 10
        German 195 95 100
        Greek 55 25 25
        Gujarati 315 155 155
        Hakka 0 0 0
        Hebrew 135 70 65
        Hindi 205 110 95
        Hungarian 245 120 125
        Ilocano 125 55 70
        Indo-Iranian languages, n.i.e. 15 10 10
        Italian 70 25 45
        Japanese 100 45 55
        Khmer (Cambodian) 15 5 5
        Korean 710 340 375
        Kurdish 5 5 5
        Lao 10 5 10
        Latvian 5 5 5
        Lingala 0 0 0
        Lithuanian 10 5 5
        Macedonian 20 15 10
        Malay 35 20 15
        Malayalam 95 45 50
        Maltese 0 0 0
        Mandarin 1,575 770 805
        Marathi 40 20 20
        Nepali 25 15 15
        Niger-Congo languages, n.i.e. 35 15 15
        Norwegian 5 0 5
        Oromo 15 10 10
        Panjabi (Punjabi) 270 135 130
        Pashto 30 15 10
        Persian (Farsi) 385 185 200
        Polish 660 315 350
        Portuguese 155 75 80
        Romanian 675 345 330
        Rundi (Kirundi) 10 10 5
        Russian 1,935 945 990
        Rwanda (Kinyarwanda) 0 0 0
        Semitic languages, n.i.e. 15 10 10
        Serbian 285 145 140
        Serbo-Croatian 85 45 40
        Shanghainese 0 0 0
        Sign languages, n.i.e. 20 15 10
        Sindhi 25 10 15
        Sinhala (Sinhalese) 55 25 25
        Sino-Tibetan languages, n.i.e. 20 10 10
        Slavic languages, n.i.e. 0 0 0
        Slovak 105 55 50
        Slovenian 5 5 5
        Somali 30 15 15
        Spanish 2,365 1,195 1,165
        Swahili 20 5 15
        Swedish 0 5 0
        Tagalog (Pilipino, Filipino) 2,910 1,415 1,495
        Taiwanese 5 5 0
        Tamil 150 75 80
        Telugu 40 15 20
        Thai 15 5 10
        Tibetan languages 20 10 10
        Tigrigna 60 30 35
        Turkish 45 25 20
        Ukrainian 120 60 65
        Urdu 385 195 195
        Vietnamese 215 90 125
        Yiddish 0 0 0
      Other languagesCensus data footnote 22 175 90 85
  Multiple responses         5,810 2,795 3,015
    English and French 210 100 110
    English and non-official language 5,480 2,620 2,860
    French and non-official language 30 20 15
    English, French and non-official language 90 55 35
Detailed other language spoken regularly at home
Detailed other language spoken regularly at home - Total population excluding institutional residentsCensus data footnote 19 134,830 66,560 68,270
  None 113,835 56,365 57,470
  Single responses  20,595 9,995 10,600
    English  9,695 4,815 4,880
    French  1,140 505 640
    Non-official languages  9,755 4,675 5,080
      Selected Aboriginal languagesCensus data footnote 20 25 10 15
        Atikamekw    0 0 0
        Cree, n.o.s.  15 5 10
        Dene  0 5 0
        Innu/Montagnais  0 0 0
        Inuktitut  0 0 0
        Mi'kmaq  0 0 0
        Ojibway  5 0 5
        Oji-Cree  0 0 0
        Stoney  0 0 0
      Selected non-Aboriginal languagesCensus data footnote 21 9,440 4,545 4,895
        African languages, n.i.e 30 10 20
        Afrikaans  45 25 20
        Akan (Twi)  15 10 5
        Albanian  65 30 35
        Amharic  45 20 25
        Arabic  435 235 200
        Armenian  15 5 5
        Bantu languages, n.i.e 15 10 5
        Bengali  75 40 35
        Berber languages (Kabyle)  0 0 0
        Bisayan languages  90 45 45
        Bosnian  35 15 20
        Bulgarian  25 15 10
        Burmese  0 0 0
        Cantonese  250 120 130
        Chinese, n.o.s.  485 235 250
        Creoles  35 15 20
        Croatian  100 50 60
        Czech  90 45 45
        Danish  45 15 25
        Dutch  155 75 80
        Estonian  0 0 0
        Finnish  5 5 5
        Flemish  0 0 0
        Fukien  10 5 0
        German  490 235 250
        Greek  115 55 55
        Gujarati  180 80 100
        Hakka  0 0 5
        Hebrew  190 95 95
        Hindi  245 135 110
        Hungarian  225 105 115
        Ilocano  100 45 55
        Indo-Iranian languages, n.i.e 0 0 0
        Italian  155 80 80
        Japanese  105 40 65
        Khmer (Cambodian)  15 5 5
        Korean  120 50 70
        Kurdish  5 5 0
        Lao  10 5 5
        Latvian  5 0 5
        Lingala  0 0 0
        Lithuanian  10 10 5
        Macedonian  10 5 5
        Malay  35 15 20
        Malayalam  25 15 15
        Maltese  0 0 0
        Mandarin  285 140 145
        Marathi  30 15 15
        Nepali  10 5 0
        Niger-Congo languages, n.i.e 150 75 75
        Norwegian  10 5 5
        Oromo  0 0 0
        Panjabi (Punjabi)  115 60 50
        Pashto  5 0 0
        Persian (Farsi)  105 60 45
        Polish  385 195 190
        Portuguese  90 40 45
        Romanian  280 155 125
        Rundi (Kirundi)  10 0 5
        Russian  550 275 280
        Rwanda (Kinyarwanda)  0 0 0
        Semitic languages, n.i.e 5 5 0
        Serbian  120 70 55
        Serbo-Croatian  30 15 15
        Shanghainese  5 0 0
        Sign languages, n.i.e 10 5 10
        Sindhi  35 20 15
        Sinhala (Sinhalese)  60 30 30
        Sino-Tibetan languages, n.i.e 0 0 0
        Slavic languages, n.i.e 5 5 5
        Slovak  65 30 30
        Slovenian  5 5 5
        Somali  15 10 10
        Spanish  1,055 520 535
        Swahili  40 20 20
        Swedish  20 10 15
        Tagalog (Pilipino, Filipino)  1,260 510 750
        Taiwanese  0 5 0
        Tamil  40 20 20
        Telugu  25 15 15
        Thai  25 5 15
        Tibetan languages  5 5 5
        Tigrigna  35 20 15
        Turkish  25 15 5
        Ukrainian  140 70 75
        Urdu  170 85 85
        Vietnamese  90 35 60
        Yiddish  30 15 15
      Other languagesCensus data footnote 22 290 125 165
  Multiple responses          400 200 200
    English and French  85 50 30
    English and non-official language  160 80 80
    French and non-official language  155 70 85
    English, French and non-official language  10 0 5

Symbols

... not applicable

A possible reason for the use of the three dots (...) symbol is:

  • A value that cannot be calculated such as a percentage change where the denominator is zero.

Census data: Footnotes

Footnote 1

Statistics Canada is committed to protect the privacy of all Canadians and the confidentiality of the data they provide to us. As part of this commitment, some population counts of geographic areas are adjusted in order to ensure confidentiality.

Counts of the total population are rounded to a base of 5 for any dissemination block having a population of less than 15. Population counts for all standard geographic areas above the dissemination block level are derived by summing the adjusted dissemination block counts. The adjustment of dissemination block counts is controlled to ensure that the population counts for dissemination areas will always be within 5 of the actual values. The adjustment has no impact on the population counts of census divisions and large census subdivisions.

Return to census data footnote 1 referrer

Footnote 2

A separate set of living quarters designed for or converted for human habitation in which a person or group of persons reside or could reside. In addition, a private dwelling must have a source of heat or power and must be an enclosed space that provides shelter from the elements, as evidenced by complete and enclosed walls and roof, and by doors and windows that provide protection from wind, rain and snow.

Return to census data footnote 2 referrer

Footnote 3

A separate set of living quarters which has a private entrance either directly from outside or from a common hall, lobby, vestibule or stairway leading to the outside, and in which a person or a group of persons live permanently.

Return to census data footnote 3 referrer

Footnote 4

Refers to the age at last birthday before the reference date, that is, before May 10, 2011.

Refer to the Census Dictionary for more information.

Return to census data footnote 4 referrer

Footnote 5

The median age is an age 'x', such that exactly one half of the population is older than 'x' and the other half is younger than 'x'.

Return to census data footnote 5 referrer

Footnote 6

Refers to the marital status of the person, taking into account his/her common-law status. For more information, refer to the Census Dictionary: Marital status.

Return to census data footnote 6 referrer

Footnote 7

Census family - Refers to a married couple (with or without children), a common-law couple (with or without children) or a lone parent family. For more information, refer to the Census Dictionary: Census family.

Return to census data footnote 7 referrer

Footnote 8

Census family structure - Refers to the classification of census families into married couples (with or without children of either and/or both spouses), common-law couples (with or without children of either and/or both partners), and lone-parent families by sex of parent. A couple may be of opposite or same sex. A couple with children may be further classified as either an intact family or stepfamily, and stepfamilies may, in turn, be classified as simple or complex. Children in a census family include grandchildren living with their grandparent(s) but with no parents present.

Return to census data footnote 8 referrer

Footnote 9

Non-relatives may be present.

Return to census data footnote 9 referrer

Footnote 10

Refers to the basic division of private households into family and non-family households. Family household refers to a household that contains at least one census family, that is, a married couple with or without children, or a couple living common-law with or without children, or a lone parent living with one or more children (lone-parent family). One-family household refers to a single census family (with or without other persons) that occupies a private dwelling. Multiple-family household refers to a household in which two or more census families (with or without additional persons) occupy the same private dwelling. Family households may also be divided based on the presence of persons not in a census family.

Non-family household refers to either one person living alone in a private dwelling or to a group of two or more people who share a private dwelling, but who do not constitute a census family.

Return to census data footnote 10 referrer

Footnote 11

Refers to households that consist solely of one census family without additional persons.

Return to census data footnote 11 referrer

Footnote 12

Refers to households with opposite-sex or same-sex couples.

Return to census data footnote 12 referrer

Footnote 13

Refers to one-census family households with additional persons and to multiple-census family households, with or without additional persons.

Return to census data footnote 13 referrer

Footnote 14

Refers to households with opposite-sex or same-sex couples.

Return to census data footnote 14 referrer

Footnote 15

Structural type of dwelling - Characteristics that define a dwelling's structure, for example, the characteristics of a single-detached house, a semi-detached house, a row house, or an apartment or flat in a duplex. Refers to the structural characteristics and/or dwelling configuration, that is, whether the dwelling is a single-detached house, an apartment in a high-rise building, a row house, a mobile home, etc.

Return to census data footnote 15 referrer

Footnote 16

Includes mobile homes and other movable dwellings such as houseboats and railroad cars.

Return to census data footnote 16 referrer

Footnote 17

The category 'Other dwelling' is a subtotal of the following categories: semi-detached house, row house, apartment or flat in a duplex, apartment in a building that has fewer than five storeys and other single-attached house.

Return to census data footnote 17 referrer

Footnote 18

Household, private - Person or group of persons occupying the same dwelling. Refers to a person or a group of persons (other than foreign residents) who occupy a private dwelling and do not have a usual place of residence elsewhere in Canada.

Household size - Number of persons occupying a private dwelling. Refers to the number of usual residents in a private household.

Return to census data footnote 18 referrer

Footnote 19

The population excluding institutional residents includes Canadian citizens (by birth or by naturalization) and landed immigrants (permanent residents) excluding those who live in institutions (institutional collective dwellings). Canadian citizens and landed immigrants either: (1) have a usual place of residence in Canada; (2) are abroad either on a military base or attached to a diplomatic mission; or (3) are at sea or in port aboard merchant vessels under Canadian registry or Canadian government vessels. Since 1991, the target population also includes persons with a usual place of residence in Canada who are claiming refugee status, who hold study permits, or who hold work permits, as well as family members living with them; for census purposes, this group is referred to as non-permanent residents. The population universe does not include foreign residents.

Return to census data footnote 19 referrer

Footnote 20

The languages shown were selected based on the Aboriginal mother tongues most often reported as single responses in Canada in the 2011 Census of Population.

Return to census data footnote 20 referrer

Footnote 21

The languages shown were selected based on the non-Aboriginal mother tongues (other than English or French) most often reported as single responses in Canada in the 2011 Census of Population.

Return to census data footnote 21 referrer

Footnote 22

This is a subtotal of all languages collected by the census that are not displayed separately here. For a full list of languages collected in the census, please refer to Appendix D in the 2011 Census Dictionary.

Return to census data footnote 22 referrer

Footnote 23

English is the first official language spoken by Quebec's official language minority, which consists of all individuals with English as a first official language spoken and half of those with both English and French. French is the first official language spoken by the official language minority in the country overall and in every province and territory outside Quebec, which consists of all individuals with French as a first official language spoken and half of those with both English and French.

Return to census data footnote 23 referrer

How to cite

How to cite: Statistics Canada. 2013. Calgary Southwest, Alberta (Code 48008) (table). National Household Survey (NHS) Profile. 2011 Census. Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 99-004-XWE. Ottawa. Released June 26, 2013.
http://www12.statcan.gc.ca/nhs-enm/2011/dp-pd/prof/index.cfm?Lang=E (accessed May 16, 2024).

Data source

2011 Census of Population

Download current census table

  •  CSV (approx. 50 kb)
  •  TAB (approx. 50 kb)

Download census data for complete geographic level

Related links

Map

Map

Map: Calgary Southwest (Federal electoral district, 2003 Representation Order), Alberta

Geographic hierarchy

Geographic hierarchy

Geographic hierarchy: Calgary Southwest, Alberta (Federal electoral district, 2003 Representation Order)

Note

Note: For more information regarding geographic hierarchies, refer to the Illustrated Glossary: Hierarchy of standard geographic units tutorial.

Related data

Related data

Related data: Calgary Southwest (Federal electoral district, 2003 Representation Order), Alberta

2011 NHS

  • Additional NHS data are not available for this area. Please refer to the 2011 NHS Data Products for additional geographies.

2011 Census

Date modified: