Layoffs Canada

Canadian Layoff Tracker

Aggregating layoffs across Canada from employment standards filings, government notices, SEDAR+ corporate disclosures, union announcements, and verified media reporting

Last updated: March 26, 2026 at PDT

105,042

People Laid Off

203

Companies

16

Industries Affected

Canadian Layoff Trends

This tracker currently covers layoff events from 203 companies, affecting more than 105,042 workers across Canada. Data is sourced from government labour adjustment notices, SEDAR filings, union statements, and verified media reporting.

The technology, financial services, and retail sectors have historically accounted for the largest share of reported layoffs — a pattern consistent with broader North American economic cycles. Ontario and British Columbia, home to the greatest concentration of corporate headquarters, tend to represent the largest share of national layoff volumes.

About the Data

Mandatory public disclosure thresholds vary by province. Smaller employers — particularly those below statutory headcount minimums — are often not required to file public notices, which means the figures tracked here represent a conservative floor, not a complete census. Unreported layoffs, especially in sectors with high contractor and part-time workforces, may be substantially higher.

This site is updated continuously as new filings and reports become available. If you are aware of a layoff event not yet listed, please send us a tip.

View Details for Okanagan College
Okanagan College Layoffs 2026Media Report

Okanagan College laid off 12 staff members and offered 34 early retirement packages, totaling 46 positions eliminated, due to a significant drop in international student enrollment following federal restrictions on study permits. The college also cut the Modern Languages in Arts program and suspended a Science in Nursing partnership program with UBC Okanagan.

12
people
View Details for B.C.'s Agricultural Land Commission
B.C.'s Agricultural Land Commission Layoffs 2026Media Report

The head of B.C.'s Agricultural Land Commission announced that job cuts are coming to the independent agency that decides how protected farmland is used in the province. The layoffs come amid a broader debate over the best approach to preserve the province's prime agricultural land.

42
people
View Details for University of the Fraser Valley
University of the Fraser Valley Layoffs 2026Media Report

University of the Fraser Valley laid off 45 faculty and staff positions due to a $20 million deficit caused by a significant decline in international student enrollment. The layoffs included 6 teaching faculty reductions, 4 non-teaching faculty reductions, and 35 staff reductions, along with 3 involuntary workload reductions.

45
people
View Details for Tree Island Steel
Tree Island Steel Layoffs 2026Media ReportRetro

Tree Island Steel, a Richmond, British Columbia-based wire and fabricated wire products manufacturer, implemented a 27% workforce reduction in response to a sharp revenue decline in 2025. The downturn was driven by lower U.S. volumes amid expanded U.S. tariffs, resulting in full-year sales falling to $161.8 million from $207.0 million and a net loss of $5.3 million.

~113
people (est.)
View Details for North Island College
North Island College Layoffs 2026Media Report

North Island College is cutting teaching and administrative positions, affecting approximately 10 full-time equivalent jobs, due to an $8.4 million decline in international revenue by 2027 caused by federal immigration policy changes. The college is also suspending 15 programs and reviewing offerings with lower enrolment to address significant financial challenges.

10
people
View Details for Camosun College
Camosun College Layoffs 2026Media ReportRetro

Camosun College announced workforce adjustments due to a $7.2-9 million budget cut caused by a 60% drop in international student enrollment. The college has issued Section 54 notices to its three unions and is exploring alternatives to layoffs including early retirements, voluntary severance, and reduced term contracts, though exact numbers of affected employees have not been disclosed.

90
people
View Details for Mission Hill Vineyards
Mission Hill Vineyards Layoffs 2026Media ReportRetro

Mission Hill Vineyards laid off workers following a catastrophic winter freeze that caused significant reduction in operations. A British Columbia arbitrator dismissed a grievance seeking severance pay for one of the affected workers.

5
people
View Details for Thompson Rivers University
Thompson Rivers University Layoffs 2026Media ReportRetro

Thompson Rivers University has shed more than 10% of its workforce in the last 15 months due to a 26% drop in international enrolment caused by federal immigration policy changes. The university expects to slash an additional $25 million from next year's budget, with ongoing layoffs and potential elimination of five academic student services due to unfilled retirements and sabbaticals.

150
people
View Details for College of New Caledonia
College of New Caledonia Layoffs 2026Media Report

College of New Caledonia is permanently closing its Fort St. James campus on March 31, 2026, due to an $8 million revenue shortfall caused by caps on international student visas. The closure follows previous staff layoffs and relocations at the campus, which previously served approximately 200 students in programs like culinary arts and trades.

View Details for Kwantlen Polytechnic University
Kwantlen Polytechnic University Layoffs 2026Media Report

Kwantlen Polytechnic University is laying off unionized staff and cutting costs due to a sharp drop in international student enrolment, aiming to save $5 million—about 40–45 full-time positions—through staff reductions, frozen overtime, and unfilled vacancies.

45
people
View Details for Trinity Western University
Trinity Western University Layoffs 2026Media Report

Trinity Western University is laying off approximately 75 staff members due to federal restrictions on international student study permits, which have reduced enrolment and created financial pressures. The cuts are part of cost-saving measures implemented across the Canadian post-secondary landscape following a 7% reduction in maximum international student permits for 2026.

75
people
View Details for Vancouver Community College
Vancouver Community College Layoffs 2026Media Report

Meanwhile, at Vancouver Community College, the administration says that 70 regular faculty member will be losing their jobs.

70
people
View Details for Government of British Columbia
Government of British Columbia Layoffs 2026Media ReportRetro

Premier David Eby announced that 2,000 public service jobs have been eliminated as part of an expenditure management and efficiency review, with more cuts expected in the 2026 budget. The province is targeting administrative positions that do not support front-line service delivery while facing an $11.2 billion deficit.

2,000
people
View Details for Domtar
Domtar Layoffs 2026Media Report

Domtar will begin laying off 350 workers at its Crofton mill starting February 3, 2026. The union is requesting federal support from a $50-million softwood lumber worker assistance fund to provide early retirement options for affected employees.

350
people
View Details for Domtar
Domtar Layoffs 2025Media Report

Domtar announced the permanent closure of its pulp mill in Crofton, British Columbia, resulting in 350 workers being laid off effective February 2026. The company cited lack of access to economically viable wood fibre as the primary reason for the closure.

350
people
View Details for Drax
Drax Layoffs 2025Media Report

Drax, a U.K.-based renewable energy company, announced the closure of its wood pellet plant in Williams Lake, B.C., effective by the end of 2025, resulting in 30 job losses. The closure is attributed to the curtailment and closure of nearby sawmills and reduced fibre availability, making operations no longer commercially viable.

Nov 26, 2025·British Columbia·Energy
30
people
View Details for West Fraser
West Fraser Layoffs 2025Media Report

West Fraser Timber Co. announced the closure of its lumber mill in 100 Mile House, British Columbia by the end of 2025, resulting in 165 job losses. The company cited inability to reliably access economically viable timber supplies locally and from other regions, compounded by U.S. tariffs on softwood lumber and reduced fibre availability from insect outbreaks and wildfires.

165
people
View Details for West Fraser
West Fraser Layoffs 2025Media Report

West Fraser announced a mill closure in 100 Mile House, British Columbia, resulting in 165 job losses. The layoffs were announced on November 7, 2025.

165
people
View Details for Sinclar Group Forest Products
Sinclar Group Forest Products Layoffs 2025Media Report

Sinclar Group Forest Products announced a 40 per cent reduction in work hours affecting approximately 350 sawmill workers across three B.C. mills (Lakeland Mills in Prince George, Apollo Forest Products in Fort St. James, and Nechako Lumber Co. in Vanderhoof) effective October 27, 2025. The cutbacks were attributed to Trump tariffs and duties on Canadian softwood exports, combined with provincial policy challenges and fibre supply uncertainty.

350
people
View Details for Selkirk College
Selkirk College Layoffs 2025Media Report

Selkirk College is closing its Kootenay Studio Arts campus in Nelson at the end of the academic year, resulting in the loss of 10 full-time and part-time positions. The closure is attributed to financial pressures caused by federal cuts to international student study permits, which has reduced a major revenue source for the college.

10
people
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