The population of the Northwest Territories grew by a paltry 0.5 per cent to 44,741 people between Jan. 1, 2024 and Jan. 1, 2023.
That was far below national growth of 3.2 per cent during the same time frame.
The increase of 226 people was due to 504 births exceeding 323 deaths and 610 international migrants settling in the territory compared to 565 people moving away.
Since the fourth quarter of 2020, the NWT's net international migration has been on "an increase," the NWT Bureau of Statistics stated.
There was growth in the Beaufort Delta, Dehcho, Sahtu and Tlicho regions year over year. However, the Yellowknife and South Slave regions both saw declines in population between July 1, 2022 and July 1, 2023.
For every person living in the NWT, the federal government transferred $37,555 in 2023-24. That is projected to rise to $39,216 in per capita allocation in 2024-25.
Demographic changes
The NWT's non-Indigenous population was slightly higher than the Indigenous population as of July 1, 2023: 22,507 to 22,465, respectively. That was a reversal of 2022 when the territory's Indigenous population held an edge by a couple hundred people.
The Indigenous population was significantly greater than the number of non-Indigenous people in the Beaufort Delta, the Dehcho, the Sahtu and the Tlicho. The gap narrowed in the South Slave. In Yellowknife, the non-Indigenous population formed a large majority: 16,188 to 5,174 Indigenous residents.
There were 23,032 men and 21,940 women in the territory as of July 1, 2023.
The territory remained considerably younger than the national profile with the median age of residents at 35.6 years compared to 40.6 for the entire country.
Based on the 2021 census, which uses a different approach to ascertaining population than Statistics Canada's quarterly estimates, Yellowknife's population grew to 19,673 from the 19,141 residents recorded during the 2016 census.
The city had 7,773 private dwellings as of the 2021 census, of which 7,225 were occupied. The average household size was 2.6 people.
Across the territory, there were 17,603 private dwellings.
Census data
In April, Statistics Canada released data on the Indigenous population from the 2021 census. It showed that the Indigenous population of the Northwest Territories stood at 20,040 at the time, a decline of 3.9 per cent since the previous census in 2016.
The biggest drop was in the Metis population, which fell 14.6 per cent to 2,890 since 2016. Nationally, Metis numbers grew by 6.3 per cent.
First Nations individuals in the NWT were 6.6 per cent fewer than five years earlier with 12,315 identifying as part of that demographic. Across Canada, the First Nations population expanded by 9.7 per cent.
Meanwhile, the territory's Inuit population rose by 1.8 per cent to 4,155.
NWT population by region and community as of July 1, 2023
Beaufort Delta region 7,022
Aklavik 667
Fort McPherson 775
Inuvik 3,383
Paulatuk 358
Sachs Harbour 118
Tsiigehtchic 192
Tuktoyaktuk 1,058
Ulukhaktok 471
Dehcho region 3,325
Fort Liard 515
Fort Providence 736
Fort Simpson 1,335
Hay River Dene Reserve 274
Jean Marie River 69
Kakisa 45
Nahanni Butte 87
Sambaa K'e 108
Wrigley 135
Sahtu region 2,704
Colville Lake 154
Deline 666
Fort Good Hope 591
Norman Wells 763
Tulita 530
South Slave region 7,009
Enterprise 93
Fort Resolution 523
Fort Smith 2,530
Hay River 3,449
Lutsel K'e 344
Tlichǫ region 3,059
Behchoko 2,034
Gametı̀ 282
Wekweetı̀ 122
Whatı̀ 621
Yellowknife region 21,853
Dettah 211
Yellowknife 21,362
Yellowknife unorganized: 280
Source: NWT Bureau of Statistics
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