Canadian Birth Records by Province

Select a province to get a full guide — official sources, how to order records, and what to do when records are missing.

Alberta

Public access: 120 years

Birth records become public after 120 years. Older records held at the Provincial Archives of Alberta.

View guide →

British Columbia

Public access: 120 years

Birth records public after 120 years. The BC Archives (Royal BC Museum) holds digitized vital records searchable online.

View guide →

Manitoba

Public access: Varies (generally 100+ years)

Civil registration began in 1882. Vital Statistics and the Archives of Manitoba both hold records.

View guide →

New Brunswick

Public access: Varies (generally 100+ years for public search)

Civil registration began in 1888. The Provincial Archives of New Brunswick holds extensive vital and church records.

View guide →

Newfoundland & Labrador

Public access: Varies

Newfoundland joined Canada in 1949. Church records dominate pre-Confederation research. Critical note: pre-1949 births require special analysis.

View guide →

Nova Scotia

Public access: Varies (older records publicly accessible through Archives)

Civil registration ran 1864–1876, then restarted province-wide in 1909. There is a gap period. Nova Scotia Archives holds both eras.

View guide →

Ontario

Public access: 104 years

Civil registration began in 1869. Records public after 104 years. Archives of Ontario and FamilySearch are the primary research tools.

View guide →

Prince Edward Island

Public access: Varies (older records publicly accessible)

Civil registration began around 1906. Earlier records are church-based. Baptism records searchable through the PEI Public Archives.

View guide →

Quebec

Public access: Special — see details below

The most complex province for records. Civil registration was not standardized until 1994. Navigating the DEC, BAnQ, and the Drouin Collection is essential.

View guide →

Saskatchewan

Public access: Varies

Civil registration began in 1878 as part of the North-West Territories. eHealth Saskatchewan manages genealogy queries for vital records.

View guide →

US Records Sources

If your Canadian ancestor emigrated to the US, US government records can document their Canadian birth and identity.

SourceWhat You Can GetLink
USCIS Genealogy ProgramAlien files (A-files), naturalization records of deceased immigrantsVisit ↗
Social Security Administration FOIASS-5 application forms with birthplace, date, and parentsVisit ↗
FamilySearchFree genealogy database; supports wildcard searchVisit ↗
Ancestry.comPaid database; often free through public librariesVisit ↗
Tip: Use wildcard search on FamilySearch (e.g., "McD*nald" instead of "McDonald") to catch spelling variants and transcription errors.