Technology-related employment in Canada is expected to increase in 2025, continuing a recent trend of steady job growth across the county, according to new research from CompTIA, the leading global provider of vendor-neutral information technology (IT) training and certifications.

The study, titled ‘State of the Tech Workforce Canada 2025,’ estimates that net tech employment[1] reached an estimated 1,445,188 workers in 2024, an increase of 1.9% over the previous year, or approximately 27,500 more workers. In 2025 net tech employment is forecast to grow 1.4% to 1.46 million workers. Since 2019, net tech employment has increased by an estimated 290,500 new jobs. Net tech employment accounts for 6.8% of Canada’s total workforce.

Source: Adobe

“Job growth is anticipated in several occupation categories; from the bedrocks of tech support, cybersecurity, infrastructure and software to rapidly emerging fields such as artificial intelligence and advanced data analytics,” said Gary Mofford, account director, Canada, CompTIA. “Hiring intent reflects the critical importance of technology, tech workers and digitally fluent employees for organisations of all sizes, in all industries and in every locale.”

In the next 10 years tech occupation employment is expected to grow 1.77 times as fast as overall employment across the Canadian economy. Occupation categories expected to experience the strongest growth include software engineers and designers (+163%), information systems managers (+153%), cybersecurity specialists (+131%), data scientists (+126%), data analysts and administrators (+116%) and business systems specialists (+113%).

T.O has largest tech workforce

Among the provinces, Ontario recorded the largest increase in net tech employment, adding an estimated 17,837 workers in 2024. Alberta (6,083), Manitoba (1,565), Nova Scotia (1,301) and Quebec (1,206) followed.

The Toronto metropolitan area has the largest tech workforce (414,667) and the highest concentration of technology workers as a percentage of its overall workforce (10.7%), above the national benchmark of 6.8%. Montreal (8.7%), Vancouver (8.6%), and Calgary (7.4%) are also above the national rate.

Canada’s technology industry includes an estimated 83,260 business establishments and accounts for approximately 5.8% of direct economic value, which translates to $131.6 billion CAD. The estimated median annual wage for a technology worker in Canada is $97,197 (CAD), which is 48% higher than the median national wage for all occupations.