Canada’s religious landscape is fast changing. As per a report by Pew Research Center, irreligion is gaining popularity in the country while the participation of religious believers in religious services is rapidly dropping. While Christians constitute a vast majority of the country’s population, the number of people who identify as Christians is also decreasing. On the other hand, several minority religious communities in Canada, and especially the Muslim community, are flourishing. Here are some of the most important facts related to this changing religious demographics of Canada:
Religion Now Has Less Influence On Canadian Society
According to a 2018 survey by Pew Research, 64% of Canadians believed that religion had less influence on public life that it did 20 years back. The percentage of Canadians who engage in religious practices like praying daily or attending weekly services has also fallen considerably. Around 36% of Canadians reported that they never pray while nearly 50% claimed they seldom or never attend worship services. However, around 55% of the population agreed that religion still has a somewhat significant role in their life. But young Canadians are less likely to be religious than the older generations.
Canadian Immigrants Are Changing The Country’s Religious Composition

Muslims Are The Fastest-growing Religious Group In Canada

There Are Regional Differences In Canada’s Religious Scene
Western Canada has the highest share of 'religious nones'. 44% of British Columbia’s population claim to be religiously unaffiliated. This trend also prevails in Ontario and the Prairie provinces of Canada. In Atlantic Canada, the percentage share of 'religious nones' have increased over the years but at a slower rate than the regions already mentioned. In Quebec, the population of the unaffiliated has increased slowly as the province has a majority population with strong Catholic background.Similarly, the growth of minority religions in the country has also been non-uniform across the country. In Ontario, the religious minorities have grown at the fastest pace from 5% to 15% between 1981 and 2011. In British Columbia, the religious minorities have also exhibited significant growth. The Canadian Prairie provinces and Atlantic Canada has, however, exhibited a smaller change in their minority religious communities.