Canada Removal Statistics 2026

CBSA Removal Statistics 2026: Record Deportations in 2025, with 5,260 Removals in Q1 2026

The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) is responsible for removing foreign nationals who are in Canada illegally or who have lost their right to stay. In 2025, the CBSA removed 23,160 individuals – the highest annual total in over a decade, representing a 33% increase over 2024 (17,397). The first quarter of 2026 (January–March) saw an additional 5,260 enforced removals.

This article presents a complete, table‑rich analysis of the latest CBSA removal statistics, including breakdowns by region, inadmissibility grounds, removal order types, enforcement methods, and top citizenships. All data is current as of April 15, 2026 (for inventories) and March 31, 2026 (for Q1 2026 removals).


Quick Facts – CBSA Removals at a Glance (2025–2026 Q1)

MetricValue
Total removals in 202523,160 (↑33% from 2024)
Total removals Q1 20265,260
Most common inadmissibility in 2025Non‑compliance (refugee claimants) – 19,225 removals
Most common removal order type (2025)Deportation order – 11,112 (48% of removals)
Top citizenship removed in 2025Mexico – 4,837
Top citizenship removed in Q1 2026India – 1,712
Current removal‑in‑progress inventory31,482 individuals (as of April 15, 2026)
Total wanted inventory33,332 individuals

Source: CBSA removals statistics (2020–2026 Q1)


Table 1: Total Enforced Removals by Region (2020–2025 & Q1 2026)

Region2020202120222023202420252026 Q1
Atlantic57706210415918846
Quebec5,9241,5932,4966,0366,97010,6282,886
Northern Ontario284234295410491546114
Greater Toronto Area4,5003,6582,7144,3065,4117,1621,286
Southern Ontario2043046971,3471,072984142
Prairie9668335907721,1161,545345
Pacific9238311,4812,2562,1782,107441
Grand Total12,8587,5238,33515,23117,39723,1605,260

Key observations:

  • Quebec alone accounted for 46% of all removals in 2025 (10,628).
  • The Greater Toronto Area followed with 7,162 removals (31%).
  • Q1 2026 already shows 2,886 removals in Quebec – on pace to exceed 11,000 for the full year.

Table 2: Removals by Inadmissibility Type (2020–2025 & Q1 2026)

Inadmissibility Ground2020202120222023202420252026 Q1
Criminality (s. 36)584494568656765934260
Transborder criminality (s. 36)00003913221
Organized crime (s. 37)33272751909818
Misrepresentation (s. 40)14511610615315614528
Non‑compliance – non‑claimants (s. 41)1,5191,3291,6652,1622,3292,549559
Non‑compliance – refugee claimants (s. 41)10,4935,5255,93912,13613,95019,2254,352
Others (security, human rights, health, etc.)84323073687722
Total12,8587,5238,33515,23117,39723,1605,260

Critical insight: Non‑compliance among refugee claimants drives the vast majority of removals – 83% of all removals in 2025 (19,225 out of 23,160). This reflects failed refugee claims and individuals who did not comply with the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act.


Table 3: Removals by Removal Order Type (2020–2025 & Q1 2026)

Removal Order Type2020202120222023202420252026 Q1
Departure order1,3579409742,1854,3525,2281,340
Exclusion order1,5621,8353,0207,3926,0846,8201,081
Deportation order9,8634,7014,3415,6546,96111,1122,839
Not captured764700000
Total12,8587,5238,33515,23117,39723,1605,260

Meaning: A deportation order permanently bars return to Canada unless written authorization is obtained. In 2025, 48% of all removals were deportation orders, up from 40% in 2024.


Table 4: Removal Enforcement Methods (2020–2025 & Q1 2026)

Method2020202120222023202420252026 Q1
Departure confirmed from Canada (R240(1))3,3604,2355,95912,36114,14016,9563,614
Departure confirmed overseas (R240(2))2819638949288
Administrative removals (R240(3))8,6473,2652,3122,7803,2086,1751,638
Not captured823411010
Total12,8587,5238,33515,23117,39723,1605,260

Administrative removals (self‑deportation or evidence of departure without confirmation) represented 27% of removals in 2025 (6,175 people).


Table 5: Escorted vs. Unescorted Removals (2020–2025 & Q1 2026)

Type2020202120222023202420252026 Q1
Escorted4245918371,4041,1831,639261
Unescorted12,4306,9287,49213,74216,10720,6194,988
Not captured4468510790211
Total12,8587,5238,33515,23117,39723,1605,260

In 2025, only 7% of removals required an escort (1,639 cases), indicating that the vast majority of foreign nationals left Canada without needing physical supervision.


Removals Inventory Overview (as of April 15, 2026)

The CBSA maintains several inventories to manage enforcement.

Table 6.1: Removal Sub‑Inventories by Region

RegionNot Yet ActionableRemoval Not PossibleWantedRemoval in ProgressTotal
Quebec183,22915,2568,53313,750220,768
Greater Toronto Area65,4756,60621,07910,747103,907
Pacific34,6411,1411,4432,18739,412
Prairie15,0292,3329541,86520,180
Northern Ontario15,5541,4168921,19419,056
Southern Ontario3,5474033672534,570
Atlantic51116858133870
Not assigned165,8791,73861,353168,976
Grand Total483,86529,06033,33231,482577,739

Definitions:

  • Not yet actionable: Individuals with pending refugee applications or protected status.
  • Removal not possible: Legal barriers such as court appeals, PRRA, or criminal sentences.
  • Wanted: Individuals who failed to appear for removal; subject to immigration warrant.
  • Removal in progress: Actively being processed for departure.

Currently, 33,332 individuals are wanted by CBSA, meaning they have evaded removal. The removal‑in‑progress inventory stands at 31,482.

Table 6.2: Removal in Progress Inventory by Inadmissibility Type

Inadmissibility TypeCount
Non‑compliance – refugee claimants27,515
Criminality (s. 36)1,504
Non‑compliance – non‑claimants1,475
Misrepresentation (s. 40)422
Not captured299
Organized crime (s. 37)47
Security grounds (s. 34)85
Human rights violations (s. 35)31
Others24
Total31,482

Nearly 87% of the removal‑in‑progress inventory consists of failed refugee claimants (non‑compliance).


Top Citizenships – Removals (2020–2025 & Q1 2026)

Table 7.1: Top 10 Citizenships Removed (2020–2026 Q1)

Rank2020202120222023202420252026 Q1
1India (1,424)Mexico (1,041)Mexico (1,762)Mexico (3,297)Mexico (3,688)Mexico (4,837)India (1,712)
2Mexico (1,391)India (603)India (786)India (1,132)India (2,004)India (3,779)Mexico (743)
3Pakistan (1,011)China (522)US (524)Colombia (1,057)Colombia (984)Haiti (2,275)Haiti (248)
4China (847)US (472)China (457)China (746)Haiti (821)Colombia (892)US (184)
5Romania (630)Pakistan (402)Colombia (420)US (553)Romania (681)Romania (828)Colombia (169)
6US (570)Colombia (319)Pakistan (312)Venezuela (512)US (643)US (803)Romania (138)
7Colombia (322)Romania (280)Romania (222)Haiti (458)China (550)Venezuela (626)Bangladesh (116)
8Bangladesh (308)Nigeria (242)Hungary (214)Turkey (444)Venezuela (482)Pakistan (456)Pakistan (109)
9Haiti (308)Haiti (168)Nigeria (200)Afghanistan (393)Pakistan (394)China (455)Nigeria (97)
10Nigeria (302)Hungary (137)Haiti (162)Hungary (355)Hungary (390)Nigeria (438)Chile (84)

Trends:

  • Mexico was the top citizenship removed for five consecutive years (2021–2025), peaking at 4,837 in 2025.
  • India overtook Mexico in Q1 2026 (1,712 vs. 743), likely due to increased enforcement of failed refugee claims and overstays.
  • Haiti surged into the top three in 2025 (2,275 removals) and remains high in Q1 2026.

Table 7.2: Removal‑in‑Progress Inventory – Top 10 Citizenships (as of April 15, 2026)

RankCitizenshipInventory Count
1India6,980
2Mexico5,311
3United States1,617
4China1,464
5Nigeria1,122
6Colombia963
7Pakistan928
8Brazil751
9Chile724
10Bangladesh633
Remaining10,989
Total31,482

Indian nationals make up the largest group in the removal‑in‑progress inventory (6,980), followed by Mexico (5,311). This suggests that many Indian and Mexican nationals are actively being processed for removal.


Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Q1: How many people did Canada remove in 2025?
A: The CBSA removed 23,160 foreign nationals in 2025, a 33% increase from 2024 (17,397).

Q2: What is the most common reason for removal?
A: Non‑compliance among refugee claimants (failed claims, missed deadlines, etc.) accounted for 83% of removals in 2025.

Q3: What is the difference between a departure order, exclusion order, and deportation order?
A:

  • Departure order: Leave within 30 days; no permanent bar.
  • Exclusion order: Cannot return for 1 year (or 5 years for misrepresentation).
  • Deportation order: Permanent ban; requires written authorization to return.

Q4: Which region removes the most people?
A: Quebec consistently leads, with 10,628 removals in 2025 (46% of national total).

Q5: Who is in the removal‑in‑progress inventory?
A: As of April 15, 2026, 31,482 individuals are being actively processed for removal. The largest group by citizenship is India (6,980), followed by Mexico (5,311).

Q6: Can someone be removed if they have a pending refugee claim?
A: No – individuals with a pending claim are in the “not yet actionable” inventory and cannot be removed until a final decision is made.

Q7: How many people are currently wanted by CBSA for evading removal?
A: The wanted inventory contains 33,332 individuals who failed to appear for removal proceedings.


What These Statistics Mean for Canada’s Immigration System

  • Removal enforcement has intensified significantly – from 12,858 removals in 2020 to 23,160 in 2025, an 80% increase.
  • Failed refugee claimants are the primary driver – over 19,000 removed in 2025, representing 83% of all removals.
  • Deportation orders are increasingly used – almost half of all removals now result in permanent bars.
  • Quebec and Ontario bear the greatest enforcement burden – together they accounted for 77% of removals in 2025.
  • India and Mexico remain key source countries – they top both removal and inventory lists.

The CBSA continues to prioritize removals of individuals who pose a risk to public safety or who have exhausted all legal avenues. With an inventory of over 31,000 in active removal processing, enforcement volumes are expected to remain high throughout 2026.

Canada’s removal machine is operating at record levels. In 2025, the CBSA removed over 23,000 people – the highest annual figure on record – and Q1 2026 data suggests another strong year. Failed refugee claimants account for the vast majority of removals, and the removal‑in‑progress inventory remains high at over 31,000 individuals.

For immigration practitioners, policymakers, and foreign nationals, these statistics underscore the importance of compliance with Canadian immigration laws and the real consequences of overstaying, misrepresentation, or failed claims.

Bookmark this page for regular updates – the CBSA releases quarterly removal statistics.


Update published: April 28, 2026. Data source: CBSA removals statistics (2020–2026 Q1), inventories as of April 15, 2026.

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