Total population | |
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1,355,653 3.86% of the Canadian population (est. 2015) |
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Regions with significant populations | |
Toronto, Mississauga, Brampton, Markham, Durham Region, Waterloo Region, Hamilton, Ottawa, Montreal, Calgary, Edmonton, Winnipeg, Vancouver, Surrey, Burnaby, Abbotsford, most urban areas | |
Languages | |
Religion | |
Related ethnic groups | |
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Region | Total Responses | ||||
Immigrant population | 474,530 | ||||
United States | 2,410 | ||||
Central and South America | 40,475 | ||||
Caribbean and Bermuda | 24,295 | ||||
Europe | 12,390 | ||||
**United Kingdom | 11,200 | ||||
**Other European | 1,190 | ||||
Africa | 45,530 | ||||
Asia | 332,150 | ||||
**West Central Asia and the Middle East | 6,965 | ||||
**Eastern Asia | 720 | ||||
**South-East Asia | 4,260 | ||||
**South Asia | 320,200 | ||||
Oceania and other | 17,280 | ||||
Non-permanent residents | 9,950 |
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Religion | Total responses | Single responses | Multiple Responses | ||
Total | 713,330 | 581,665 | 131,665 | ||
Sikhism | 239,225 | 217,805 | 21,425 | ||
Hinduism | 192,680 | 174,455 | 18,225 | ||
Islam | 124,650 | 101,015 | 23,635 | ||
Christianity | 117,430 | 65,485 | 51,945 | ||
Eastern religions | 5,875 | 4,785 | 1,090 | ||
Buddhism | 11,435 | 870 | 560 | ||
Jainism | 1,291 | 803 | 600 | ||
Judaism | 655 | 160 | 500 | ||
Other religions | 655 | 540 | 120 | ||
No religious affiliation | 30,725 | 16,555 | 14,175 |
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Language | Total: Language spoken at home | Only speaks | Mostly speaks | Equally speaks | Regularly speaks |
Punjabi* | 280,540 | 132,380 | 71,660 | 29,220 | 47,280 |
Hindi | 165,890 | 114,175 | 116,075 | 19,090 | 26,550 |
Urdu* | 89,365 | 30,760 | 27,840 | 12,200 | 18,565 |
Tamil* | 97,345 | 45,865 | 29,745 | 9,455 | 12,280 |
Gujarati | 60,105 | 18,310 | 16,830 | 7,175 | 17,790 |
Malayalam | 6,570 | 1,155 | 1,810 | 505 | 3,100 |
Bengali* | 29,705 | 12,840 | 9,615 | 2,780 | 4,470 |
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Indo-Canadians or Indian Canadians are Canadian citizens whose heritage is fully or partially South Asian (including Indian and other origins), children of persons who immigrated from India and/or South Asia to Canada, or persons of Indian/South Asian origin who have Canadian citizenship. The terms East Indian and South Asian are sometimes used to distinguish people of ancestral origin from India in order to avoid confusion with the First Nations of Canada. Statistics Canada uses "East Indian" to refer to people specifically from post-partition India.
First Nations of Canada are also officially referred to as 'Indians' by the Canadian government under the Indian Act. This is partially because historically the Americas were mistaken by Columbus as India and Native Americans were mistaken by Columbus for Indians and later as West Indians. Therefore, there is no need to distinguish between West and East Indians, because the term "Indian" only refers to a single ethnic group. The main concentration of the Indo-Canadian population is found in the Lower Mainland of British Columbia (which includes Greater Vancouver) and the Greater Toronto Area, however there are growing communities in Calgary, Edmonton, Hamilton, and Montreal.
Indo-Canadians are significantly more likely than the Canadian average to have a university degree, and most Indians in Canada are socio-economically middle class and affluent. 54% of South Asians in Canada have household incomes greater than $60,000, compared to the 46% Canadian average. Canadian adults of East Indian origin are much less likely than other adults to live alone. In 2001, just 4% of the East Indian community aged 15 and over lived alone, compared with 13% of all adult Canadians. Seniors of East Indian origin are especially unlikely to live alone. That year, only 8% of Canadians of East Indian origin aged 65 and over lived alone, compared with 29% of all seniors in Canada. In contrast, seniors of East Indian origin are more likely than other seniors to live with members of their extended family. In 2001, 24% of seniors of East Indian origin lived with relatives, such as the family of a son or daughter, while only 5% of all seniors in Canada lived with relatives.