Canada's labour market finally caught a bit of a break in June

Labour Force Survey June 2026

July 10, 2026
3 min read
Anupriya
Anupriya Gangopadhyay

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Unemployment rate fell for a second straight month to 6.5%, youth hiring picked up, and wage growth strengthened to 3.3% year over year. Employment, on the other hand, rose by 18,000 — pushing the employment rate up to 60.8%.

The recovery is still uneven. Manufacturing, agriculture, and utilities all lost jobs, reminding us that some sectors of the economy continue to face pressure. While some of the recent volatility in the market appears to be easing, broader global and trade uncertainty still cloud the outlook. We expect the Bank of Canada to hold its policy rate at 2.25% for a sixth consecutive decision.

  • Unemployment and Participation Rates: The unemployment rate declined for a second consecutive month, falling 0.1 percentage points to 6.5%, matching the rate last seen in January. The participation rate held steady at65.0%, indicating that the decline in unemployment was not driven by a shrinking labour force. The job-finding rate also improved to 24.3%, up from 21.3% a year earlier, pointing to a modest improvement in labour market absorption.
  • Demographics and Job Types: Employment gains were concentrated amongyouth aged 15 to 24 and core-aged workers aged 25 to 54, each adding 33,000 jobs in June. Youth unemployment fell sharply by 0.7 percentage points to 12.7%, supported mainly by part-time employment gains, while unemployment among core-aged men and women held steady. However, employment among workers aged 55 and older declined by 47,000, highlighting continued unevenness across age groups.
  • Sectoral Breakdown: Industry performance remained mixed in June. Employment rose in accommodation and food services (+15,000), marking the sector’s third consecutive monthly increase, while losses were concentrated in manufacturing (-17,000), agriculture (-7,600) and utilities (-7,300). Manufacturing remains a key weak spot, with employment down 61,000 from its January 2025 peak, amid ongoing tariff-related uncertainty.
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