Alberta The
Legislature of Alberta, under a
Progressive Conservative majority government, passed the
Election Amendment Act, 2011, on December 8, 2011. It provided that a general election would be held between March 1 and May 31, 2012, and after that, in the same three-month period in the fourth calendar year after a general election. Amendments enacted by
Jason Kenney's United Conservative government in 2021 eliminated the three-month period and fixed the date of the election on the last Monday of May. Further amendments enacted by
Danielle Smith's UCP government in 2024 fixed the date of the election on the third Monday in October.
British Columbia British Columbia was the first jurisdiction in Canada to adopt fixed election dates, doing so in 2001. The legislation amended the
Constitution Act of British Columbia to require an election on May 17, 2005, and the second Tuesday in May every four years thereafter. In October 2017, the legislature passed amendments to the
Constitution Act that changed the fixed election date from the second Tuesday of May to the third Saturday of October.
Manitoba The
Legislative Assembly of Manitoba passed acts in 2008 so as to stipulate that an election will be held on the first Tuesday in October in the fourth calendar year after election day; the first was in October 2011. The act also includes a provision to move the election if, as of January 1 of the election year, the election period would otherwise overlap with a federal election period; the provincial election is to be postponed until the third Tuesday of the following April.
New Brunswick New Brunswick amended the Legislative Assembly Act in 2007 to introduce fixed election dates, causing an election to be held every four years, on the fourth Monday in September, the first was September 2010. The act was amended again in 2017 to change the fixed election date to the third Monday in October in the fourth calendar year following the last election.
Newfoundland and Labrador The
Legislative Assembly of Newfoundland and Labrador, with a majority held by the
Progressive Conservative Party headed by
Danny Williams, passed legislation in 2004, fixing the date of elections in
Newfoundland and Labrador. General elections in the province are required to be held on the second Tuesday in October every four years, the first fixed date election occurred on
October 9, 2007. In the event that a premier leaves office while the legislature is summoned, the new premier is required to, within 12 months of being appointed, advise the
lieutenant governor to call an election.
Nova Scotia Nova Scotia and Ontario are the only provinces to not have fixed date elections. Nova Scotia was the last province to introduce fixed-election-date legislation. Following the
2021 provincial election,
premier Tim Houston promised to implement fixed election date legislation. On October 13, 2021, Houston introduced a bill in the
House of Assembly to propose amendments to the
Elections Act, requiring the province to hold elections every four years, on the third Tuesday of July, with the first date being set for July 15, 2025. Houston's government requested a
snap election for
November 26, 2024, before the first scheduled fixed date was reached. On February 18, 2025, Premier Tim Houston introduced a bill to repeal the fixed election date legislation. The bill received royal assent on March 26, 2025, repealing Nova Scotia's fixed election date legislation.
Ontario Ontario and Nova Scotia are the only provinces to not have fixed date elections. The
Ontario Legislature, with a majority held by
Dalton McGuinty's
Liberals, passed the Election Statute Law Amendment Act, 2005, which requires elections to be held on the first Thursday in October every four years, starting with 2007. However, the act does not prevent the
Lieutenant Governor of Ontario from dissolving the legislature "when the Lieutenant Governor sees fit". The law also allows the date to be moved forward to any of the seven days following the first Thursday of October in the case of religious or culturally significant holidays: the 2007 election was moved from October 4 to 10 to avoid the
Jewish holiday of
Shemini Atzeret. As of December 2016, the Elections Act was amended, scheduling all subsequent provincial elections for "the first Thursday in June in the fourth calendar year following polling day in the most recent general election". This amendment would have resulted in the next provincial election occurring on June 4, 2026. However, Premier
Doug Ford requested an early dissolution of the legislature with
an election held on February 27, 2025. Ford's government announced a proposal on October 27, 2025, to eliminate fixed election dates as part of a series of changes to provincial election law in order to "return Ontario to an electoral process that served our province well... prior to the imposition of American-style fixed election dates." The bill removing fixed election dates received royal assent and went into effect on November 27.
Prince Edward Island In 2007,
Pat Binns'
Progressive Conservatives (PCs) introduced a bill for fixed election dates, but an
election was called before the bill could pass the legislature. Since the PCs had previously defeated a similar
Liberal motion in 2006,
Robert Ghiz, then leader of the opposition, said, "if they [the Progressive Conservatives] were concerned about accountability and fixed election dates they would have voted a year ago to have a fixed election date set for this election. They chose not to do that." However, when the Liberal Party held a majority in the legislative assembly, an act was in 2008 passed to amend the election act, mandating an election would be held every four years on the first Monday in October.
Quebec The
Quebec legislature passed a bill which received royal assent on June 14, 2013, that establishes fixed election dates held on the first Monday in October of the fourth calendar year following the end of the legislature. It also includes a provision to move the election to the first Monday of April in the fifth year, if the election period overlaps with a federal or municipal election period. Had the National Assembly not been dissolved earlier and the federal and municipal elections remained as scheduled, the first fixed date election would have been held on October 3, 2016. However, on March 5, 2014, just over 18 months after the previous election, the assembly was dissolved by Lieutenant Governor
Pierre Duchesne at the request of Premier
Pauline Marois, who headed a minority government. The first fixed-date election was held on Monday, October 1, 2018.
Saskatchewan The
Saskatchewan Legislature amended
The Legislative Assembly and Executive Council Act in 2007 to stipulate that an election will be held on the first Monday of November in the fourth calendar year following the previous election. In 2018 the act was changed to specify the last Monday of October. The first fixed election was in November 2011. The act also includes a provision to move the election if the election period overlaps with a federal election period; the provincial election is to be postponed until the first Monday of the following April. ==Territorial==