Chart 3
Occupancy rate for short-term residential facilities for victims of abuse, by province or territory, Canada, April 30, 2025
x
suppressed to meet the confidentiality requirements of the Statistics Act.
Note(s):
The April 30, 2025 reference period reflects the survey snapshot day, a predetermined business day meant to represent a typical day of operations for facilities across Canada. Facilities are defined by their mandated expected length of stay, regardless of practice. Short-term facilities include facilities with an expected length of stay of less than three months, which typically provide individual beds to residents, as opposed to separate apartments or units. The occupancy rate is calculated by dividing the total number of residents on the snapshot day by the total number of funded beds, multiplied by 100. Occupancy can exceed 100% if there are more residents staying in facilities than there are available funded beds. Data for Prince Edward Island are suppressed to meet the confidentiality requirements of the Statistics Act.
Source(s):
Survey of Residential Facilities for Victims of Abuse (3328).
Chart description
This is a bar clustered chart.
| facility occupancy rate (%) | |
|---|---|
| Canada | 71.7 |
| Newfoundland and Labrador | 67.3 |
| Prince Edward Island | x |
| Nove Scotia | 50.9 |
| New Brunswick | 67.2 |
| Quebec | 89.0 |
| Ontario | 81.0 |
| Manitoba | 46.6 |
| Saskatchewan | 62.7 |
| Alberta | 53.3 |
| British Columbia | 63.0 |
| Yukon | 40.4 |
| Northwest Territories | 41.0 |
| Nunavut | 53.2 |
x
suppressed to meet the confidentiality requirements of the Statistics Act.
Note(s):
The April 30, 2025 reference period reflects the survey snapshot day, a predetermined business day meant to represent a typical day of operations for facilities across Canada. Facilities are defined by their mandated expected length of stay, regardless of practice. Short-term facilities include facilities with an expected length of stay of less than three months, which typically provide individual beds to residents, as opposed to separate apartments or units. The occupancy rate is calculated by dividing the total number of residents on the snapshot day by the total number of funded beds, multiplied by 100. Occupancy can exceed 100% if there are more residents staying in facilities than there are available funded beds. Data for Prince Edward Island are suppressed to meet the confidentiality requirements of the Statistics Act.
Source(s):
Survey of Residential Facilities for Victims of Abuse (3328).
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