East Asian ancestry % in Canada (2021) | |
| Total population | |
|---|---|
| 2,288,775[1][2][a][b] 6.3% of the total Canadian population (2021) | |
| Regions with significant populations | |
| Southern Ontario,Metro Vancouver,Central Alberta,Montreal | |
| Languages | |
| Canadian English · Canadian French · Mandarin · Cantonese · Korean · Japanese · Mongolian · Min Nan · Tibetan Other East Asian Languages | |
| Religion | |
| Buddhism · Chinese folk religion · Christianity · Confucianism · Shintoism · Taoism · Irreligion | |
| Related ethnic groups | |
| East Asian diaspora |


East Asian Canadians areCanadians who were either born in or can trace theirancestry toEast Asia. East Asian Canadians are also a subgroup ofAsian Canadians. According toStatistics Canada, East Asian Canadians are consideredvisible minorities and can be further divided by on the basis of both ethnicity and nationality, such asChinese Canadian,Hong Kong Canadian,Japanese Canadian,Korean Canadian,Mongolian Canadian,Taiwanese Canadian, orTibetan Canadian, as seen on demi-decadalcensus data.
According to the2021 Canadian census, 2,288,775 Canadians had trace their ancestry to East Asia, constituting 6.3 percent of the total population and 31.2 percent of the total Asian Canadian population.[1][2][a][b] Additionally as of 2021, East Asians comprise the third largestpan-ethnic group in Canada afterEuropeans (69.8 percent)[3] andSouth Asians (7.1 percent).[2]
For Canadian government census purposes and contemporary Canadian parlance, East Asian Canadians are typically identified and referred under the term "Asian"; popular usage of this term in Canada generally excludes bothSouth andWest Asians, both groups with ancestral origins in the Middle East and in the Indian subcontinent respectively, and instead solely referring to individuals who trace their ancestry to the East Asian mainland.
| Year | Pop. | ±% |
|---|---|---|
| 2001 | 1,314,225 | — |
| 2006 | 1,628,260 | +23.9% |
| 2011 | 1,817,590 | +11.6% |
| 2016 | 2,148,230 | +18.2% |
| 2021 | 2,288,775[a] | +6.5% |
| Source:Statistics Canada [1][2][4][5][6][7] | ||
The first record ofEast Asians in what is known as Canada today can be dated back to 1788 when renegade British CaptainJohn Meares hired a group of Chinese carpenters from Macau and employed them to build a ship atNootka Sound,Vancouver Island,British Columbia. After the outpost was seized by Spanish forces, the eventual whereabouts of the carpenters was largely unknown.
In the mid-late 19th century, early settlers from East Asia, namely China and Japan, emigrated to Canada, predominantly settling in the province of British Columbia.
During the mid-19th century, many Chinese arrived to take part in theBritish Columbia gold rushes. Beginning in 1858, early settlers formedVictoria's Chinatown and other Chinese communities inNew Westminster,Yale, andLillooet. Estimates indicate that about 1/3 of the non-native population of the Fraser goldfields was Chinese.[8][9] Later, the construction of theCanadian Pacific Railway prompted another wave of immigration from China. Mainly hailing fromGuangdong, the Chinese helped build theCanadian Pacific Railway through theFraser Canyon.
ManyJapanese people also arrived in Canada during the mid to late 19th century and became fishermen and merchants in British Columbia. Early immigrants from Japan most notably worked in canneries such asSteveston along the pacific coast.
By 1884,Nanaimo, New Westminster, Yale, andVictoria had the largest Chinese populations in the province. Other settlements such asQuesnelle Forks were majority Chinese and many early immigrants from there settled on Vancouver Island, most notably inCumberland.[10] In addition to work on the railway, most Chinese in the late 19th century British Columbia lived among other Chinese and worked in market gardens, coal mines, sawmills, and salmon canneries.[11]
In 1885, soon after the construction on the railway was completed, the federal government passed theChinese Immigration Act, whereby the government began to charge a substantialhead tax for each Chinese person trying to immigrate to Canada. A decade later, the fear of the "Yellow Peril" prompted the government ofMackenzie Bowell to pass an act forbidding any East Asian Canadian from voting or holding office.[12]
Many Chinese workers settled in Canada after the railway was constructed, however most could not bring the rest of their families, including immediate relatives, due to government restrictions and enormous processing fees. They establishedChinatowns and societies in undesirable sections of the cities, such as East Pender Street in Vancouver, which had been the focus of the early city's red-light district until Chinese merchants took over the area from the 1890s onwards.[13]
Immigration restrictions stemming fromanti-East Asian sentiment in Canada continued during the early 20th century. Parliament voted to increase the Chinesehead tax to $500 in 1902; this temporarily caused Chinese immigration to Canada to stop. However, in following years, Chinese immigration to Canada recommenced as many saved up money to pay the head tax.
Heightened anti-East Asian sentiment resulted in the infamousanti-East Asian pogrom in Vancouver in 1907. Spurred by similarriots in Bellingham targeting Punjabi Sikh South Asian settlers, theAsiatic Exclusion League organized attacks against homes and businesses owned by East Asian immigrants under the slogan "White Canada Forever!"; though no one was killed, much property damage was done and numerous East Asian Canadians, namely Chinese and Japanese Canadians were beaten up.
In 1923, thefederal government passed theChinese Immigration Act of 1923, which banned all Chinese immigration, and led to immigration restrictions for all East Asians. In 1947, the act was repealed.
According to the1931 Canadian census, subdivisions includingRichmond (East Asians formed 40 percent of the total population),SkeenaCoast (37 percent),Fraser Mills (34 percent),Cumberland (32 percent),Maple Ridge (27 percent), WestVancouver Island (27 percent),Mission (24 percent),Bella Coola Coast (24 percent),Duncan (18 percent), andPitt Meadows (17 percent) had the largest East Asian concentrations in British Columbia.[14]: 482
| Subdivision | Type | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Population | Percentage | ||
| Vancouver | Urban | 21,339 | 8.65% |
| Victoria | Urban | 3,999 | 10.23% |
| Richmond | Urban | 3,262 | 39.87% |
| Maple Ridge | Urban | 1,351 | 27.39% |
| SouthVancouver Island | Rural | 1,315 | 8.56% |
| New Westminster | Urban | 1,200 | 6.85% |
| Skeena Coast | Rural | 955 | 36.96% |
| Mission | Urban | 868 | 24.16% |
| Bella Coola Coast | Rural | 865 | 24.11% |
| Upper Okanagan &Shuswap | Rural | 809 | 9.17% |
| Cumberland | Urban | 769 | 32.43% |
| WestVancouver Island | Rural | 614 | 26.92% |
| Surrey | Urban | 596 | 7.11% |
| Delta | Urban | 567 | 15.29% |
| Howe Sound | Rural | 529 | 10.96% |
| South East CoastVancouver Island | Rural | 523 | 9.81% |
| Nicola | Rural | 475 | 8.26% |
| North Cowichan | Urban | 449 | 13.64% |
| North East CoastVancouver Island | Rural | 442 | 6.08% |
| Saanich | Urban | 432 | 3.33% |
| Nanaimo | Urban | 420 | 6.49% |
| Prince Rupert | Urban | 390 | 6.14% |
| Duncan | Urban | 337 | 18.29% |
| Kamloops | Urban | 329 | 5.33% |
| Kelowna | Urban | 322 | 6.92% |
| NorthVancouver Island | Rural | 279 | 11.08% |
| Burnaby | Urban | 266 | 1.04% |
| Saltspring &Islands | Rural | 266 | 9.65% |
| Knight Inlet Coast | Rural | 228 | 17.18% |
| Vernon | Urban | 218 | 5.54% |
| Port Alberni | Urban | 217 | 9.21% |
| Fraser Mills | Urban | 210 | 34.09% |
| Matsqui | Rural | 200 | 5.22% |
| Powell RiverCoast | Rural | 195 | 3.21% |
| Nelson | Urban | 176 | 2.94% |
| Coquitlam | Urban | 175 | 3.59% |
| Upper Kootenay River | Rural | 173 | 2.27% |
| Portland Canal-Nass | Rural | 167 | 6.18% |
| Similkameen River | Rural | 154 | 2.48% |
| Lower Fraser Valley | Rural | 151 | 3.2% |
| Port Moody | Urban | 155 | 12.3% |
| Cranbrook | Urban | 147 | 4.79% |
| Pitt Meadows | Urban | 145 | 17.43% |
| North Vancouver | Rural | 126 | 2.63% |
| Chilliwack | Rural | 119 | 2.05% |
| Armstrong | Urban | 107 | 10.82% |
| Revelstoke | Urban | 106 | 3.87% |
| Trail | Urban | 102 | 1.35% |
| Upper Columbia River | Rural | 93 | 2.34% |
| Kootenay & Slocan Lakes | Rural | 91 | 0.95% |
| Summerland | Urban | 88 | 4.91% |
| Langley | Urban | 86 | 1.55% |
| West Vancouver | Urban | 86 | 1.8% |
| University Endowment Area | Urban | 83 | 14.43% |
| Coldstream | Urban | 78 | 9% |
| Prince George | Urban | 77 | 3.11% |
| Cariboo | Rural | 75 | 3.97% |
| North Thompson | Rural | 74 | 3.24% |
| Oak Bay | Urban | 73 | 1.24% |
| Chilliwack | Urban | 68 | 2.76% |
| North Columbia River | Rural | 65 | 3.4% |
| Bridge-Lillooet | Rural | 62 | 3.39% |
| Shuswap | Rural | 62 | 1.36% |
| Penticton | Urban | 60 | 1.29% |
| Spallumcheen | Urban | 52 | 3.19% |
| Merritt | Urban | 48 | 3.7% |
| Skeena-Bulkley | Rural | 42 | 1.61% |
| North Vancouver | Urban | 39 | 0.46% |
| Quesnel | Urban | 39 | 8.74% |
| Kent | Urban | 35 | 2.9% |
| Elk & Flathead Rivers | Rural | 35 | 0.73% |
| South Columbia River | Rural | 34 | 0.47% |
| Rossland | Urban | 33 | 1.16% |
| Salmon Arm | Urban | 33 | 3.98% |
| Kaslo | Urban | 32 | 6.12% |
| Port Coquitlam | Urban | 32 | 2.44% |
| Kettle River | Rural | 27 | 0.81% |
| North Coast | Rural | 27 | 8.88% |
| Courtenay | Urban | 26 | 2.13% |
| Fernie | Urban | 25 | 0.92% |
| Queen Charlotte Islands | Rural | 25 | 2.69% |
| Salmon Arm | Rural | 25 | 1.5% |
| Smithers | Urban | 25 | 2.5% |
| Esquimalt | Urban | 23 | 0.7% |
| South Chilcotin | Rural | 20 | 8.77% |
| Ladysmith | Urban | 18 | 1.25% |
| Kiskatinaw River | Rural | 15 | 0.32% |
| Sumas | Urban | 15 | 0.83% |
| Glenmore | Urban | 14 | 4.62% |
| North Chilcotin | Rural | 14 | 1.98% |
| Nechako-Fraser-Parsnip | Rural | 12 | 0.46% |
| Abbotsford | Urban | 10 | 1.96% |
| Creston | Urban | 10 | 1.44% |
| East Lillooet | Rural | 10 | 1% |
| Grand Forks | Urban | 10 | 0.77% |
| Hope | Urban | 9 | 2.41% |
| Enderby | Urban | 8 | 1.44% |
| Terrace | Urban | 8 | 2.27% |
| Williams Lake | Urban | 8 | 1.99% |
| Alberni | Urban | 7 | 1% |
| Stikine-Liard | Rural | 7 | 2.33% |
| Atlin Lake | Rural | 5 | 1.02% |
| Burns Lake | Urban | 5 | 2.48% |
| Fraser-Canoe | Rural | 5 | 0.21% |
| Vanderhoof | Urban | 5 | 1.64% |
| Upper Nechako | Rural | 3 | 0.16% |
| Babine-Stuart-Takla Lakes | Rural | 2 | 0.32% |
| Beaton River | Rural | 2 | 0.12% |
| Silverton | Urban | 2 | 0.74% |
| Tadanac | Urban | 2 | 0.43% |
| Greenwood | Urban | 1 | 0.58% |
| British Columbia | Total | 49,344 | 7.11% |
World War II prompted the federal government used theWar Measures Act to brand Japanese Canadians enemy aliens and categorized them as security threats in 1942. Tens of thousands of Japanese Canadians were placed in internment camps in British Columbia; prison of war camps in Ontario; and families were also sent as forced labourers to farms throughout the prairies. By 1943, all properties owned by Japanese Canadians in British Columbia were seized and sold without consent.
UnlikeKorean Americans who have relatively much longer history settling in the United States, very few settled in Canada; as late as 1965, the total permanent Korean population of Canada was estimated at only 70.[15] However, with the 1966 reform ofCanadian immigration laws, South Korean immigration to Canada began to grow.[15] By 1969, there were an estimated 2000 Koreans in Canada.[16]
In the late 1990s,South Korea became the fifth-largest source of immigrants to Canada.[17]Toronto has the country's largest absolute number of Koreans, butVancouver is experiencing the highest rate of growth in its Korean population, with a 69% increase since 1996.Montreal was the third most popular destination for Korean migrants during this period.[18] The 1990s growth in South Korean migration to Canada occurred at a time when Canadian unemployment was high and income growth was low relative to the United States.[19] One pair of researchers demonstrated that numbers of migrants were correlated with the exchange rate; the weakness of theCanadian dollar relative to theUnited States dollar meant that South Korean migrants bringing savings to Canada for investment would be relatively richer thanthose going to the United States.[20] Other factors suggested as drivers behind the growth of South Korean immigration to Canada included domestic anti-Americanism and the large presence of CanadianEnglish teachers in localhagwon.[21]
WhenHong Kong reverted to mainland Chinese rule, people emigrated and found new homes in Canada.
| Ethnic/National Origins | 2021[1][2] | 2016[4] | 2011[5] | 2006[6] | 2001[7] | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pop. | % | Pop. | % | Pop. | % | Pop. | % | Pop. | % | |
| Chinese | 1,715,770 | 74.96% | 1,769,1951 | 82.39% | 1,487,5801 | 81.88% | 1,346,5101 | 82.74% | 1,094,7001 | 83.33% |
| Korean | 218,140 | 9.53% | 198,210 | 9.23% | 168,890 | 9.3% | 146,545 | 9% | 101,715 | 7.74% |
| Japanese | 129,425 | 5.65% | 121,485 | 5.66% | 109,740 | 6.04% | 98,905 | 6.08% | 85,230 | 6.49% |
| Hong Kong | 81,680 | 3.57% | N/a | N/a | N/a | N/a | N/a | N/a | N/a | N/a |
| Taiwanese | 64,020 | 2.8% | 36,515 | 1.7% | 30,330 | 1.67% | 17,705 | 1.09% | 18,080 | 1.38% |
| Tibetan | 9,350 | 0.41% | 8,040 | 0.37% | 5,820 | 0.32% | 4,275 | 0.26% | 1,425 | 0.11% |
| Mongolian | 9,090 | 0.4% | 7,475 | 0.35% | 5,355 | 0.29% | 3,960 | 0.24% | 1,675 | 0.13% |
| OtherEast Asian Origins | 61,300 | 2.68% | 6,505 | 0.3% | 9,045 | 0.5% | 9,545 | 0.59% | 10,805 | 0.82% |
| Total East Asian Canadian Population[b] | 2,288,775 | 100% | 2,147,425 | 100% | 1,816,760 | 100% | 1,627,445 | 100% | 1,313,630 | 100% |
| 1IncludingHong Kong Canadians. | ||||||||||
| Province | 2016[4] | 2011[5] | 2006[6] | 2001[7] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pop. | % | Pop. | % | Pop. | % | Pop. | % | |
| 1,008,780 | 7.62% | 855,280 | 6.76% | 767,160 | 6.38% | 614,915 | 5.45% | |
| 679,015 | 14.89% | 586,545 | 13.56% | 539,350 | 13.24% | 457,555 | 11.83% | |
| 232,535 | 5.85% | 191,305 | 5.36% | 166,105 | 5.1% | 129,590 | 4.41% | |
| 140,235 | 1.76% | 117,580 | 1.52% | 105,245 | 1.42% | 74,015 | 1.04% | |
| 37,825 | 3.05% | 29,000 | 2.47% | 23,200 | 2.05% | 17,550 | 1.59% | |
| 22,950 | 2.14% | 17,150 | 1.7% | 12,775 | 1.34% | 10,815 | 1.12% | |
| 12,570 | 1.38% | 9,045 | 1% | 6,720 | 0.74% | 4,895 | 0.55% | |
| 6,585 | 0.9% | 5,345 | 0.73% | 3,960 | 0.55% | 2,430 | 0.34% | |
| 2,970 | 0.58% | 2,275 | 0.45% | 1,930 | 0.39% | 1,260 | 0.25% | |
| 3,105 | 2.22% | 2,385 | 1.74% | 475 | 0.35% | 305 | 0.23% | |
| 715 | 1.74% | 620 | 1.52% | 530 | 1.29% | 410 | 1.1% | |
| 825 | 2.35% | 920 | 2.76% | 650 | 2.15% | 365 | 1.28% | |
| 150 | 0.42% | 110 | 0.35% | 95 | 0.32% | 55 | 0.21% | |
| 2,148,230 | 6.23% | 1,817,590 | 5.53% | 1,628,260 | 5.21% | 1,314,225 | 4.43% | |
In 2021, just over 25 million people reported being White in the census, representing close to 70% of the total Canadian population. The vast majority reported being White only, while 2.4% also reported one or more other racialized groups.