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How Much Do Architects Make in Canada 2026 | Architecture Salaries

Updated

Architecture is one of the longer professional paths in Canada, requiring a professional degree plus years of supervised internship before licensing. The pay reflects a profession where passion often matters as much as compensation — mid-career architects earn less than engineers or accountants with comparable education, but the gap narrows significantly for those who reach principal or partner level. Firm size matters enormously: large corporate firms pay more consistently, while small studios may offer more creative freedom at lower salaries.

Architect Salary by Experience

Level Intern Architect Licensed Architect
Entry level (0-2 years) $45,000-$55,000
Junior (2-4 years) $50,000-$62,000 $58,000-$72,000
Intermediate (4-7 years) $68,000-$90,000
Senior (7-12 years) $85,000-$115,000
Associate/Principal (12+ years) $100,000-$160,000
Partner/Firm Owner $120,000-$300,000+

Salary by Province

The biggest pay differences for architects come down to the volume and scale of projects in each market. Toronto and Vancouver dominate with high-rise residential and mixed-use work, while Alberta’s commercial and industrial sectors sustain strong demand. Smaller provinces have fewer large projects and correspondingly lower pay, though cost of living is also much lower.

Province Mid-Career Licensed Senior/Principal
Ontario (Toronto) $80,000-$110,000 $110,000-$160,000
British Columbia (Vancouver) $78,000-$105,000 $105,000-$155,000
Alberta (Calgary/Edmonton) $75,000-$100,000 $100,000-$145,000
Quebec (Montreal) $65,000-$88,000 $88,000-$130,000
Manitoba $62,000-$82,000 $82,000-$120,000
Saskatchewan $63,000-$85,000 $85,000-$125,000
Nova Scotia $58,000-$78,000 $78,000-$115,000
New Brunswick $55,000-$75,000 $75,000-$110,000

Salary by Firm Type

Firm Type Junior Mid-Career Senior
Large corporate firm (100+ staff) $55,000-$68,000 $78,000-$105,000 $105,000-$155,000
Mid-size firm (20-100 staff) $50,000-$62,000 $70,000-$95,000 $95,000-$140,000
Small studio (under 20 staff) $45,000-$58,000 $62,000-$85,000 $85,000-$130,000
Government/institutional $55,000-$65,000 $72,000-$95,000 $95,000-$125,000
Developer/in-house $58,000-$70,000 $78,000-$100,000 $100,000-$140,000

Salary by Specialization

Where you focus within architecture can significantly affect earnings. High-rise residential and commercial projects typically pay more than heritage conservation or residential design, largely because the projects are bigger and the fees are higher. Healthcare and institutional architecture is a growing niche with strong compensation due to the complexity of building codes and specialized requirements.

Specialization Mid-Career Senior
High-rise residential $75,000-$100,000 $100,000-$150,000
Commercial/office $75,000-$100,000 $100,000-$150,000
Healthcare/institutional $78,000-$105,000 $105,000-$155,000
Industrial/warehouse $72,000-$95,000 $95,000-$140,000
Sustainable/green design $70,000-$95,000 $95,000-$145,000
Interior architecture $62,000-$85,000 $85,000-$125,000
Heritage/conservation $60,000-$82,000 $82,000-$120,000
Residential (custom homes) $58,000-$80,000 $80,000-$130,000
Landscape architecture $58,000-$78,000 $78,000-$120,000
Urban design/planning $65,000-$88,000 $88,000-$130,000

Becoming an Architect in Canada

The path to licensure is one of the longest of any profession. Unlike engineering, where graduates can work independently relatively quickly, architects must complete a lengthy internship before they can stamp drawings or run projects independently.

Step Details Duration
1. Professional degree B.Arch (5-6 years) or M.Arch (2-3 years after undergrad) 4-6 years
2. Internship in Architecture Program (IAP) 3,720 hours of supervised experience across defined categories 2-3 years
3. Examination for Architects in Canada (ExAC) 4-section exam administered by provincial regulators During/after IAP
4. Provincial registration Apply to provincial association (OAA, AAA, AIBC, etc.)
Total 8-12 years

Education Costs

Item Approximate Cost
B.Arch tuition (5-6 years) $35,000-$60,000
M.Arch tuition (2-3 years) $15,000-$35,000
ExAC exam fees $2,500-$3,500
Provincial registration $800-$1,500/year
Professional liability insurance (if self-employed) $2,000-$8,000/year
Profession Mid-Career Salary Education Length
Architect (licensed) $75,000-$95,000 8-12 years
Civil engineer (P.Eng) $80,000-$110,000 6-8 years
Interior designer $55,000-$75,000 4-6 years
Urban planner $65,000-$90,000 5-7 years
Construction manager $80,000-$110,000 4-6 years
Landscape architect $60,000-$80,000 6-8 years
Architectural technologist $50,000-$70,000 3 years

Benefits and Compensation

Benefit Large Firm Small Studio
Bonus 5-15% of salary 0-10% (often project-based)
RRSP match 3-5% Rare
Health/dental Comprehensive Often basic or none
Vacation 3-4 weeks 2-3 weeks
Professional development Funded Limited budget
Licensing fees paid Usually Sometimes
Overtime expectations Moderate-high (deadlines) High (fewer staff)

Job Outlook

Canada’s housing crisis is driving demand for architects, particularly those experienced in multi-family residential, modular construction, and densification projects. Municipalities across the country are streamlining zoning to allow more housing, which creates more design work. However, AI tools like generative design software are beginning to automate some of the drafting and schematic work that junior architects traditionally handled, which may slow entry-level hiring while increasing productivity for experienced practitioners.

Factor Status
Overall demand Moderate-high — driven by housing construction
Best growth areas Multi-family residential, healthcare, sustainable design
AI impact Drafting/schematic phases being automated; design judgment still human
Supply of architects Relatively balanced nationally
Remote work Increasingly common for design phases; site visits still required
Self-employment potential High after 10+ years — many architects start own firms