List of cities in British Columbia
Victoria is the capital city of British Columbia.
According to the 2021 Canadian census , British Columbia is the third most populous province in Canada, with 5,000,879 inhabitants, and the fourth largest province by land area , covering 920,686.55 square kilometres (355,479.06 square miles).[ 1] As of 2024, British Columbia has 161 municipalities ,[ 2] out of which 53 are categorized as cities.[ 3]
Cities, towns, districts and villages in British Columbia are referred to as municipalities and all are included in local governments in the province, which may be incorporated under the Local Government Act of 2015. In order for a municipality in British Columbia to be categorized as a city, it must have a minimum population of 5,000.[ 4] [ 5] Although the populations of Enderby , Grand Forks , Greenwood and Rossland fall below this threshold, they are still categorized as cities.[ 1]
The largest city by population in British Columbia is Vancouver , with 662,248 residents, and the smallest is Greenwood, with 702 residents. The largest city by land area is Abbotsford , which spans 375.55 square kilometres (145.00 square miles), while the smallest is Duncan , at 2.07 square kilometres (0.80 square miles).[ 3] The first municipality to incorporate as a city was New Westminster on July 16, 1860,[ 6] while the province's newest city is Mission , a district municipality that was reclassified as a city on March 29, 2021.[ 7] Victoria is the capital city of British Columbia.[ 8]
Cities
Vancouver is the largest city in British Columbia by population.
Abbotsford is the largest city in British Columbia by area.
Cities in British Columbia
Name
Regional district [ 6]
Incorporation date[ 6]
Population (2021)[ 9]
Population (2016)[ 3]
Change (%)[ 3]
Area (km2 )[ 3]
Population density[ 3]
Abbotsford
Fraser Valley
December 12, 1995
153,524
141,397
8.6%
375.33 km2
409.0
Armstrong
North Okanagan
March 31, 1913
5,323
5,114
4.1%
5.22 km2
1020.0
Burnaby
Metro Vancouver
September 22, 1892
249,125
232,755
7.0%
90.57 km2
2750.7
Campbell River
Strathcona
June 24, 1947
35,519
32,588
7.6%
144.38 km2
246.0
Castlegar
Central Kootenay
January 1, 1974
8,338
8,039
3.7%
19.67 km2
419.6
Chilliwack
Fraser Valley
April 26, 1873
93,203
83,788
11.2%
261.34 km2
356.6
Colwood
Capital
June 24, 1985
18,961
16,859
12.5%
17.66 km2
1073.6
Coquitlam
Metro Vancouver
July 25, 1891
148,625
139,284
6.7%
122.15 km2
1216.7
Courtenay
Comox Valley
January 1, 1915
28,420
25,599
10.8%
32.42 km2
876.7
Cranbrook
East Kootenay
November 1, 1905
20,499
20,047
2.3%
31.97 km2
641.2
Dawson Creek
Peace River
May 26, 1936
12,323
12,178
1.2%
26.72 km2
461.1
Delta
Metro Vancouver
September 22, 2017[ 10]
108,455
102,238
6.1%
179.66 km2
603.7
Duncan
Cowichan Valley
March 4, 1912
5,047
4,944
2.1%
2.06 km2
2444.5
Enderby
North Okanagan
March 1, 1905
3,028
2,964
2.2%
4.26 km2
710.4
Fernie
East Kootenay
July 28, 1904
6,320
5,249
17.1%
15.11 km2
418.3
Fort St. John
Peace River
December 31, 1947
21,465
20,155
5.9%
32.67 km2
656.9
Grand Forks
Kootenay Boundary
April 15, 1897
4,112
4,049
1.6%
10.37 km2
396.4
Greenwood
Kootenay Boundary
July 12, 1897
702
665
5.6%
2.42 km2
290.2
Kamloops
Thompson-Nicola
October 17, 1967
97,902
90,280
8.4%
297.93 km2
328.6
Kelowna
Central Okanagan
May 4, 1905
144,576
127,380
13.5%
211.85 km2
682.4
Kimberley
East Kootenay
March 29, 1944
8,115
7,425
9.3%
60.51 km2
134.1
Langford
Capital
December 8, 1992
46,584
35,342
31.8%
41.43 km2
1124.4
Langley
Metro Vancouver
March 15, 1955
28,963
25,888
11.9%
10.18 km2
2845.2
Maple Ridge
Metro Vancouver
September 12, 2014[ 11]
90,990
82,256
10.6%
267.82 km2
339.7
Merritt
Thompson-Nicola
April 1, 1911
7,051
7,139
-1.2%
26.04 km2
270.7
Mission
Fraser Valley
March 29, 2021[ 7]
41,519
38,833
7.7%
226.98 km2
182.9
Nanaimo
Nanaimo
December 24, 1874
99,863
90,504
10.3%
90.45 km2
1104.1
Nelson
Central Kootenay
March 18, 1897
11,106
10,572
5.1%
11.93 km2
930.6
New Westminster
Metro Vancouver
July 16, 1860
78,916
70,996
11.2%
15.62 km2
5052.4
North Vancouver
Metro Vancouver
August 10, 1891
58,120
52,898
9.9%
11.83 km2
4913.0
Parksville
Nanaimo
June 19, 1945
13,642
12,514
9.5%
14.52 km2
939.5
Penticton
Okanagan-Similkameen
January 1, 1909
36,885
33,761
9.3%
44.03 km2
857.3
Pitt Meadows
Metro Vancouver
April 25, 1914
19,146
18,573
3.1%
86.34 km2
221.7
Port Alberni
Alberni-Clayoquot
October 28, 1967
18,259
17,678
3.3%
19.66 km2
928.9
Port Coquitlam
Metro Vancouver
March 7, 1913
61,498
58,612
4.9%
29.16 km2
2108.7
Port Moody
Metro Vancouver
March 11, 1913
33,535
33,551
0.0%
25.85 km2
1297.3
Powell River
Powell River
October 15, 1955
13,943
13,157
6.0%
28.91 km2
482.4
Prince George
Fraser-Fort George
March 6, 1915
76,708
74,003
3.7%
316.74 km2
242.2
Prince Rupert
North Coast
March 10, 1910
12,300
12,220
0.7%
66.00 km2
186.4
Quesnel
Cariboo
March 21, 1928
9,889
9,879
0.1%
35.35 km2
279.8
Revelstoke
Columbia Shuswap
March 1, 1899
8,275
7,547
9.4%
41.28 km2
200.5
Richmond
Metro Vancouver
November 10, 1879
209,937
198,309
5.9%
128.87 km2
1629.0
Rossland
Kootenay Boundary
March 18, 1897
4,140
3,729
11.0%
59.72 km2
69.3
Salmon Arm
Columbia Shuswap
May 15, 1905
19,432
17,706
9.7%
155.19 km2
125.2
Surrey
Metro Vancouver
November 10, 1879
568,322
517,887
9.7%
316.11 km2
1797.9
Terrace
Kitimat–Stikine
December 31, 1927
12,017
11,643
3.2%
57.33 km2
209.6
Trail
Kootenay Boundary
June 14, 1901
7,920
7,709
2.7%
34.90 km2
226.9
Vancouver [ a]
Metro Vancouver
April 6, 1886
662,248
631,486
4.9%
115.18 km2
5749.9
Vernon
North Okanagan
December 30, 1892
44,519
40,116
11.0%
96.43 km2
461.7
Victoria [ b]
Capital
August 2, 1862
91,867
85,792
7.1%
19.45 km2
4722.3
West Kelowna
Central Okanagan
June 26, 2015[ 12]
36,078
32,655
10.5%
122.09 km2
295.5
White Rock
Metro Vancouver
April 15, 1957
21,939
19,952
10.0%
5.17 km2
4240.6
Williams Lake
Cariboo
March 15, 1929
10,947
10,753
1.8%
33.12 km2
330.5
Total cities
—
—
3,327,824
3,133,081
4.5%
4263.15
1081.81
Notes:
^ Vancouver is Canada's eighth-largest city and British Columbia's largest city by population. The Vancouver CMA includes the cities of Burnaby, Coquitlam, Delta, Langley, Maple Ridge, New Westminster, North Vancouver, Pitt Meadows, Port Coquitlam, Port Moody, Richmond, Surrey, Vancouver and White Rock.
^ Victoria is British Columbia's capital. The Victoria CMA includes the cities of Colwood, Langford and Victoria.
See also
References
^ a b "Population and dwelling counts: Canada, provinces and territories" . Statistics Canada . February 9, 2022. Archived from the original on February 9, 2022. Retrieved July 4, 2024 .
^ Affairs, Ministry of Municipal. "Regional districts in B.C. - Province of British Columbia" . Government of British Columbia . Retrieved September 11, 2024 .
^ a b c d e f "Population and dwelling counts, for Canada, provinces and territories, and census subdivisions (municipalities), 2021 and 2016 censuses (British Columbia)" . Statistics Canada . February 9, 2022. Retrieved September 11, 2024 .
^ Affairs, Ministry of Municipal. "Municipalities in B.C. - Province of British Columbia" . Government of British Columbia . Retrieved September 11, 2024 .
^ "Local Government Act: Part 2 — Incorporation of Municipalities" . Government of British Columbia . December 16, 2015. Retrieved September 11, 2024 .
^ a b c "British Columbia Regional Districts, Municipalities, Corporate Name, Date of Incorporation and Postal Address" . Government of British Columbia . Archived from the original (XLS ) on July 13, 2014. Retrieved December 8, 2012 .
^ a b "Order in Council 0187-2021" . Government of British Columbia . March 29, 2021. Retrieved March 29, 2021 .
^ McGillivray, Brett (September 5, 2024). "Victoria" . Britannica . Retrieved September 11, 2024 .
^ "Census Profile, 2021 Census of Population, 2021 census (British Columbia)" . Statistics Canada . October 30, 2022. Retrieved October 17, 2019 .
^ "Order in Council No. 362" . Province of British Columbia . September 22, 2017. Retrieved January 10, 2018 .
^ "Order of the Lieutenant Governor in Council: Order in Council No. 513" (PDF) . Province of British Columbia . September 9, 2014. Retrieved September 14, 2014 .
^ "Order in Council No. 357" . Province of British Columbia . June 26, 2015. Retrieved July 1, 2015 .
^ "City of Kaslo Fonds" . MemoryBC . The British Columbia Archival Information Network. Retrieved January 18, 2023 .
^ "Name Details: Phoenix (Abandoned Locality)" . Government of British Columbia . Retrieved June 27, 2013 .
^ "From Boom to Bust in 20 Years: Sandon's History as an Incorporated City" . Sandon Museum. Retrieved June 26, 2013 .