Saskatchewan’s youth unemployment rate dropped to 11.1% in June 2026, well below the national average of 12.7%, while the province added 3,400 jobs since the start of the year. With the third-lowest overall unemployment rate in Canada and strong growth in healthcare, food services, and skilled sectors, Saskatchewan is quietly becoming one of the most workable landing spots for new immigrants.
What Do Saskatchewan’s Latest Job Numbers Actually Show?
Statistics Canada’s June 2026 data puts Saskatchewan’s youth unemployment rate at 11.1%, down sharply from 13.2% in May and comfortably below the national rate of 12.7%. Youth employment in the province is up 2,400 jobs year over year, and the province has added 3,400 jobs overall since January.
The province’s overall unemployment rate sits at 6.1%, the third lowest of any province in Canada, below the national average of 6.5%. Month over month, seasonally adjusted employment rose 0.5%, ranking second among all provinces.
Which Sectors Are Actually Hiring in Saskatchewan?
The year-over-year job gains are concentrated in a handful of sectors that matter to newcomers: accommodation and food services grew 8.3%, healthcare and social assistance grew 2.3%, and finance, insurance, real estate, and leasing grew 5.3%. These are sectors that regularly appear on provincial nominee priority lists across the country, which means growth here often translates directly into nomination opportunities for skilled and semi-skilled workers alike.
Saskatchewan’s merchandise exports also grew 36.4% year over year as of May 2026, and the province ranked second in the country for growth in housing starts, both signs of an economy adding capacity rather than treading water.
Source: Youth Unemployment Drops in June
Does a Strong Job Market Actually Help My Immigration Application?
Indirectly, yes, and in more than one way. A tight, growing labour market means provincial nomination streams tied to in-demand occupations tend to stay active, since the province genuinely needs the workers. It also means a genuine job offer, always a strong element of most Provincial Nominee Program applications, is realistically achievable rather than a formality on paper.
For applicants weighing Saskatchewan against other provinces, a falling youth unemployment rate and a below-national overall rate are a practical signal: this is a labour market that can actually absorb a newcomer, not just accept an application.
How Does Saskatchewan’s Economic Strategy Support This Growth?
This is not accidental. The Government of Saskatchewan’s labour market strategy and its investment attraction strategy are both explicitly built around growing the workforce needed to sustain the province’s economy, with a stated goal of sixteen billion dollars in annual private capital investment. Immigration and workforce planning are treated as connected policy levers, not separate conversations.
For a newcomer, that alignment matters. It suggests demand for workers in priority sectors is likely to persist rather than spike and disappear.
Is Saskatchewan’s Youth Unemployment Rate Historically Normal or Unusually Low?
It is close to Saskatchewan’s own long-run average. The June 2026 youth unemployment rate of 11.1% is broadly in line with the province’s pre-pandemic average of 10.7% between 1976 and 2019. That context matters: this is not a temporary blip but a return to, and slight improvement on, a historically healthy baseline for the province.
Frequently Asked Questions
As of June 2026, Saskatchewan’s overall unemployment rate is 6.1%, the third lowest among Canadian provinces and below the national average of 6.5%.
Accommodation and food services, healthcare and social assistance, and finance, insurance, real estate, and leasing all posted meaningful year-over-year job growth in 2026.
Yes. Saskatchewan runs its own Provincial Nominee Program with streams tied to in-demand occupations, many of which align with the sectors currently seeing job growth.
It depends on your occupation and goals, but Saskatchewan’s lower cost of living, below-national unemployment rate, and targeted nominee streams make it a strong option for candidates in shortage occupations.
A genuine, verifiable job offer in an eligible occupation can strengthen an application and, depending on the stream, may be required or heavily weighted in selection.
The Government of Saskatchewan publishes its workforce and investment strategies directly; ImmigCanada can walk you through how these priorities map onto current nominee streams.
Curious whether your occupation matches Saskatchewan’s growing sectors? Book a personalized assessment with ImmigCanada.
