Medical radiation technologists (MRTs), commonly called radiographers, are among the most in-demand healthcare professionals in Canada. They operate the imaging equipment — X-ray, CT, MRI, ultrasound, and fluoroscopy — that physicians depend on for diagnosis. The field offers solid pay, high job security, and clear paths for specialization. Unlike many healthcare professions, radiography allows you to increase your earning power significantly by adding modality certifications (CT, MRI, mammography, interventional) without returning to school for years. Most MRTs work in hospital settings with union wages, shift premiums, weekend differentials, and on-call pay that add 10-20% above base salary.
Radiographer Salary by Experience
| Level |
General Radiography |
CT Technologist |
MRI Technologist |
| New graduate (0-2 years) |
$58,000-$72,000 |
$65,000-$78,000 |
$68,000-$82,000 |
| Mid-career (2-5 years) |
$68,000-$85,000 |
$78,000-$95,000 |
$82,000-$100,000 |
| Experienced (5-10 years) |
$78,000-$92,000 |
$88,000-$102,000 |
$92,000-$108,000 |
| Senior (10+ years) |
$85,000-$98,000 |
$92,000-$108,000 |
$98,000-$115,000 |
| Team lead/charge tech |
$90,000-$105,000 |
$95,000-$112,000 |
$100,000-$118,000 |
| Manager/educator |
$95,000-$125,000 |
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Salary by Province
| Province |
General Radiographer (Mid) |
MRI Technologist (Mid) |
Notes |
| Ontario |
$72,000-$90,000 |
$85,000-$105,000 |
Largest employer base; ONA/OPSEU unions |
| British Columbia |
$70,000-$88,000 |
$82,000-$102,000 |
BCGEU/HSA union rates |
| Alberta |
$75,000-$95,000 |
$88,000-$110,000 |
AHS single employer; competitive wages |
| Saskatchewan |
$68,000-$85,000 |
$80,000-$100,000 |
SHA; northern premiums available |
| Manitoba |
$65,000-$82,000 |
$78,000-$98,000 |
Growing demand |
| Quebec |
$60,000-$78,000 |
$72,000-$92,000 |
FIQ/APTS union; lower nominal pay, lower cost |
| Nova Scotia |
$62,000-$80,000 |
$75,000-$95,000 |
NSH employer; recruitment incentives |
| New Brunswick |
$60,000-$78,000 |
$72,000-$92,000 |
Recruitment active |
| Newfoundland |
$62,000-$82,000 |
$75,000-$98,000 |
Remote premiums for Labrador |
Alberta typically offers the highest base rates for MRTs due to Alberta Health Services’ wage scales and the higher cost of living. Ontario has the most positions available. Remote and northern postings across all provinces often include $5,000-$20,000+ in additional allowances.
Salary by Imaging Modality
The specific modality you work in is the biggest factor in pay after experience. More technically demanding modalities and those requiring additional certification pay more.
| Modality |
Mid-Career Salary |
Additional Training |
| Interventional radiology |
$85,000-$110,000 |
Post-grad certificate |
| MRI technology |
$82,000-$108,000 |
Post-grad certificate (1 year) |
| Radiation therapy |
$80,000-$108,000 |
Separate degree program (3-4 years) |
| Nuclear medicine |
$80,000-$105,000 |
Separate degree program (3-4 years) |
| CT technology |
$78,000-$100,000 |
On-the-job or short certificate |
| Cardiac catheterization lab |
$78,000-$100,000 |
On-the-job training |
| Mammography |
$72,000-$92,000 |
Additional certification |
| Bone densitometry (DEXA) |
$68,000-$85,000 |
Short certification |
| General radiography (X-ray) |
$68,000-$90,000 |
Base MRT certification |
| Fluoroscopy |
$70,000-$88,000 |
Part of general radiography |
Shift Premiums and Additional Pay
Hospital-based MRTs earn significant additional pay through shift differentials, weekend premiums, and on-call compensation. These can add 10-20% to annual income.
| Premium |
Typical Rate |
| Evening shift (1500-2300) |
+$2.50-$4.50/hour |
| Night shift (2300-0700) |
+$4.00-$7.00/hour |
| Weekend premium |
+$3.00-$5.50/hour |
| On-call availability |
$4.00-$6.00/hour (while on-call) |
| Call-back (called in) |
Minimum 4 hours at 1.5x or 2x pay |
| Statutory holiday |
1.5x or 2x pay + lieu day |
| Overtime |
1.5x after standard hours |
Education Path
| Step |
Details |
Duration |
| College diploma (MRT) |
CAMRT-accredited programs across Canada |
2-3 years |
| University degree (MRT/BHSc) |
McMaster, BCIT, U of Alberta, etc. |
3-4 years |
| CAMRT national certification exam |
Required for practice in all provinces |
After graduation |
| Provincial registration |
Register with provincial regulatory body |
After certification |
| Post-graduate certificate (CT) |
Hospital-based or college |
6-12 months |
| Post-graduate certificate (MRI) |
College-based programs |
12-16 months |
| Post-graduate certificate (mammography) |
College or hospital-based |
3-6 months |
Education Costs
| Program |
Approximate Cost |
| College diploma (2-3 years) |
$10,000-$22,000 |
| University degree (3-4 years) |
$20,000-$40,000 |
| CAMRT certification exam |
~$700-$900 |
| Provincial registration (annual) |
$300-$600 |
| CT post-grad certificate |
$3,000-$8,000 |
| MRI post-grad certificate |
$5,000-$12,000 |
| CPD/continuing education |
$500-$1,500/year |
| Profession |
Mid-Career Salary |
Education |
| Diagnostic medical sonographer |
$75,000-$100,000 |
2-3 year diploma |
| MRI technologist |
$82,000-$108,000 |
MRT diploma + MRI post-grad |
| Radiation therapist |
$80,000-$108,000 |
3-4 year degree |
| Nuclear medicine technologist |
$80,000-$105,000 |
3-4 year degree |
| General radiographer (MRT) |
$68,000-$90,000 |
2-3 year diploma |
| Registered nurse (hospital) |
$72,000-$100,000 |
4-year BScN |
| Medical laboratory technologist |
$65,000-$85,000 |
2-3 year diploma |
| Respiratory therapist |
$68,000-$90,000 |
3-year diploma |
Benefits (Hospital-Based)
| Benefit |
Details |
| Pension |
HOOPP (ON), LAPP (AB), MPP (BC), or equivalent DB pension |
| Health/dental insurance |
Full coverage for employee + family |
| Vacation |
3-6 weeks (increases with seniority) |
| Sick leave |
12-18 days/year (accumulated) |
| Continuing education |
$500-$2,000/year + paid CE days |
| Professional dues |
Sometimes employer-paid |
| Overtime opportunities |
Frequent due to staffing shortages |
| Union protection |
Seniority rights, grievance process, layoff protections |
Job Outlook
Medical imaging is one of the areas of fastest growth in healthcare. Imaging volumes are increasing due to aging population, expanded screening programs, and improved diagnostic capabilities. At the same time, many experienced MRTs are nearing retirement. The result is a significant shortage that is expected to worsen before it improves. This translates to excellent job security, strong bargaining position for wages, and abundant overtime opportunities for current MRTs. For prospective students, MRT programs typically have waitlists, indicating strong interest in the profession. The investment of 2-3 years of college education leading to a $70,000-$110,000 career with excellent benefits and pension represents one of the best returns on education in Canadian healthcare.
| Factor |
Status |
| Overall demand |
Very high — chronic shortage across modalities |
| Wait times for imaging |
Significant — driving expansion of equipment and staff |
| New graduate employment |
Near 100% |
| Retirement wave |
Significant — demographically older workforce |
| AI impact |
Augmenting interpretation, not replacing technologists |
| Best-paid modalities |
MRI, interventional radiology, radiation therapy |
| Remote/northern premiums |
Substantial — $5,000-$20,000+ in allowances |