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For additional information relating to this article, please contact:

Thomas StorringDirector – Economics and Statistics
Tel: 902-424-2410Email: thomas.storring@novascotia.ca

January 16, 2025
NOVA SCOTIA POPULATION ESTIMATES BY COUNTY AND CENSUS SUBDIVISION - JULY 1, 2024

Statistics Canada has released estimates of the population by county as of July 1, 2024.  

Provincial population estimates for July 1, 2024 were released on September 25, 2024 and updated to October 1, 2024 on December 17, 2024.  These population estimates should not be confused with Census counts.  Estimates of the population adjust for net undercoverage from the Census as well as incompletely enumerated Indian reserves.  

Between July 1, 2023 and July 1, 2024 Nova Scotia's population increased by 1.88% or 19,888 persons, reaching 1,076,374 as of July 1, 2024.  Across Nova Scotia, all counties except for Digby reported population growth from July 1, 2023 to July 1, 2024.  Cape Breton county had the fastest growth at 3.18%, followed by Richmond (+2.62%) and Halifax (+2.36%). Growth was slower in Victoria, Guysborough, Queens and Shelburne counties. 

Of the 19,888 persons added to Nova Scotia's population from July 1, 2023 to July 1, 2024, Halifax accounted for the largest portion at 11,600.  Cape Breton county accounted for the next largest amount of population increase after adding 3,473 persons to the population. 

Halifax's population has risen to 503,037 or 46.7% of the provincial population as of July 1, 2024.

Cape Breton county's population was 112,789 and accounted for 10.5% of the provincial population.  The other three counties on Cape Breton Island (Inverness, Richmond and Victoria) made up 3.3% of the provincial population (35,870). 

Counties in the North Shore economic region (Colchester, Cumberland, Pictou, Guysborough, and Antigonish) had a population of 163,867 or 15.2% of the provincial total. 

Counties in the Annapolis Valley (Annapolis, Kings and Hants) had 139,061 residents or 12.9% of Nova Scotia's population. 

The counties of Southern Nova Scotia (Shelburne, Yarmouth, Digby, Queens and Lunenburg) had a population of 121,750 or 11.3% of the provincial total.

Outside of Halifax, Hants, Lunenburg, Colchester, Antigonish and Kings counties, most parts of the province have experienced periods of population decline.  However, in recent years, population decline has stopped and reversed for all counties. Reversal of population decline was particularly sharp in Cape Breton county. 

Note: vertical axis range from minimum to maximum for most counties are set to 8,000 except Cape Breton (24,000) and Halifax (160,000).

Components of county population change

Population estimates for counties change from one year to the next based on natural change (births less deaths), international migration (immigration, less net emigration, plus net change in non-permanent residents), net interprovincial migration (in-migrants from other parts of Canada to Nova Scotia less out-migrants from Nova Scotia to other parts of the country) and net intraprovincial migration (in-migrants from elsewhere in Nova Scotia less out-migrants bound for other parts of the Province). 

All counties reported more deaths than births between July 1, 2023 and July 1, 2024. The natural population decline was largest in Cape Breton (-875) and smallest in Richmond and Victoria (both reported -66).

Immigration added 13,736 to Nova Scotia's population between July 1, 2023 and July 1, 2024.  Immigration was concentrated in Halifax with 10,114 immigrants added to the population.  The next highest numbers of immigrants added were in Cape Breton (704) and Kings (665) counties.

The flow of non-permanent residents (such as temporary foreign workers and international students) slowed in the most recent year, adding 8,745 to the population between July 1, 2023 and July 1, 2024.  Cape Breton county added the most non-permanent residents with a net change of 4,245.  Halifax had the next largest net increase in non-permanent residents at 2,996.  All counties except Digby, Pictou and Victoria counties reported net increases in the number of non-permanent residents.

Overall net international migration contributed 21,992 to population growth in every county from July 1, 2023 to July 1, 2024.  The province's net international population gain was concentrated in Halifax (12,931) and Cape Breton (4,923) counties.  Queens, Victoria and Guysborough counties reported the least population gains from net international migration.

From July 1, 2023 to July 1, 2024 there was net interprovincial migration of +2,252 for the province as a whole (17,748 in-migrants less 15,496 out-migrants).

Kings (371), Lunenburg (365), Cumberland (331) and Pictou (298) saw the largest net gains from interprovincial migration. Halifax saw the largest net outflow with a net loss of 419 persons.

Net intraprovincial migration was negative for Halifax from July 1, 2023 to July 1, 2024 as 590 more people moved out of the city to other parts of the province than moved into the city from elsewhere in Nova Scotia. Cape Breton county reported the largest net intraprovincial population decline (-663).  There were also modest net intraprovincial population declines in Shelburne, Yarmouth, Digby, Antigonish, and Inverness counties. Hants, Lunenburg and Colchester counties reported the largest net gains from intraprovincial migration.  Positive intraprovincial migration levels were also reported in Queens, Annapolis, Kings, Cumberland, Pictou, Guysborough, Richmond and Victoria counties.  

Cities

In the 2021 Census, Statistics Canada changed the Halifax Census Metropolitan Area's boundaries to include the population of East Hants as well.  

The Halifax and East Hants Census Metropolitan Area grew by 2.4% from July 1, 2023 to July 1, 2024. Outside Halifax and East Hants, Nova Scotia's population growth was 4.2% in the last year.  Among Census Metropolitan Areas, Calgary, Moncton and Kitchener-Waterloo-Cambridge reported the fastest growth from July 1, 2023 to July 1, 2024.  Across Canada, Census Metropolitan Areas typically grew more rapidly than areas outside CMAs. The reverse was true in Nova Scotia, where the population outside of Halifax and East Hants grew faster.

Census Subdivisions

Census subdivisions are towns, municipal districts, regional municipalities, Indian reserves and rural areas (identified as Subdivisions A, B, C, or D in their counties).  A map of Nova Scotia's census subdivisions can be found here: Standard Geographical Classification, census division – census subdivision maps, Nova Scotia

 

Age cohorts

Nova Scotia's overall median age declined from 43.8 years on July 1, 2023 to 43.5 years on July 1, 2024.  Median age declined for most counties, but the decline in Cape Breton county's median age was particularly sharp, falling from 45.0 on July 1, 2023 to 43.3 on July 1, 2024.  Only Shelburne, Queens, Hants, Pictou, Guysborough and Victoria counties reported rising median age. Median age was unchanged in Digby county. 

In population pyramids, Halifax, Cape Breton and Antigonish counties report higher than average shares of population in younger cohorts (20-40).  Shares of population aged 50-70 were notably higher in Shelburne, Yarmouth, Digby, Queens, Annapolis, Lunenburg, Cumberland, Pictou, Guysborough, Inverness, Richmond and Victoria counties.

 

Sources: Statistics Canada. Table 17-10-0152-01  Population estimates, July 1, by census division, 2021 boundariesTable 17-10-0153-01  Components of population change by census division, 2021 boundariesTable 17-10-0155-01  Population estimates, July 1, by census subdivision, 2021 boundariesTable 17-10-0148-01  Population estimates, July 1, by census metropolitan area and census agglomeration, 2021 boundaries



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