officers preparing for the city's
Saint Patrick's Day parade in 2014 Police services in Canada are responsible for the maintenance of the
King's peace through emergency response to and intervention against violence; investigations into criminal offences and the enforcement of criminal law; and the enforcement of some civil law, such as traffic violations. The exact duties of Canadian police forces vary significantly: each province regulates the basic responsibilities of police services in their jurisdiction. In
Ontario, for example, police services are obliged to provide at least five core police services — crime prevention, law enforcement, maintenance of the public peace, emergency response, and assistance to victims of crime — to fulfill the province's requirement for "adequate and effective policing," while in neighbouring
Quebec, the responsibilities of a police force are dependent on the population it serves. Other jurisdictions, such as
Manitoba and
British Columbia, do not define adequate and effective policing, although individual regulations in both of those provinces set out basic responsibilities of police forces. Individual police services may also take on additional duties, such as municipal by-law enforcement, or have a narrower mandate (but not fewer powers) in communities that maintain
independent traffic enforcement or mental health crisis response agencies.
Federal The federal government maintains two police forces: the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) and the
Canadian Forces Military Police (CFMP). The RCMP's first responsibility is the enforcement of federal laws, although contract policing for provinces, territories, municipalities, and
First Nations is at the "heart of what the RCMP does." In addition to its contracts with three territories, eight provinces, 150 municipalities, and more than 600 Indigenous communities, the RCMP is responsible for border integrity; overseeing Canadian peacekeeping missions involving police; managing the
Canadian Firearms Program, which licenses and registers firearms and their owners; and the Canadian Police College, which provides police training to Canadian and international police forces. The force has faced criticism for its uniquely broad mandate, and a partially redacted 2019 memo to then-
Minister of Public Safety Bill Blair "confirmed" for the Minister that "federal policing responsibilities have been and are being eroded to meet contract demands." Between 2012 and 2020, the RCMP gradually closed its money laundering and financial crimes units in British Columbia and Ontario, In 2021, an all-party federal parliamentary committee recommended terminating the RCMP's contract policing program, and Public Safety Minister
Marco Mendicino was mandated to conduct a review of RCMP contract policing when he took office in 2022. members taking part in a training exercise in
South Dakota alongside their US counterparts. The CFMP provides police, security, and operational support services to the
Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) and the
Department of National Defence (DND). As a military police force, the CFMP does not have a frontline community policing role, but CFMP members are considered
peace officers under the
Criminal Code. CFMP officers have authority over any person subject to the
Code of Service Discipline (CSD), regardless of their position or rank, and can charge members of the broader public when a crime is committed on or in relation to DND property or assets, or at the request of the
Minister of Public Safety, the Commissioner of the
Correctional Service of Canada, or the Commissioner of the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police. The ability of CFMP members to enforce provincial legislation varies, however, and in several provinces, CFMP officers can enforce neither traffic legislation nor mental health legislation — even on military bases. The CFMP maintains an investigations branch, the
Canadian Forces National Investigation Service, which has the ability to investigate any crime concerning DND property or employees, except for sexual assault and intimate partner violence.
Railway police used by the
Canadian National Railway Police. Under the
Railway Safety Act, any federally regulated railway in Canada can request that a
superior court judge appoint railway employees as police officers. These officers are hired, trained, and employed by the railway for the purposes of preventing crimes against the company and the protection of goods, materials, and public rail transit being moved through the railway network, and have nationwide jurisdiction within 500 metres of a railway line or as it relates to railway operations. As of 2023, the
Canadian National Railway, the
Canadian Pacific Kansas City railway, and
Via Rail — a Crown Corporation — each maintain their own police service.
TransLink, the transit authority for the
Metro Vancouver Regional District in
British Columbia, maintains a
police force authorized by the province as opposed to the federal
Railway Safety Act. Some smaller railways and transit authorities, such as
GO Transit, also maintain provincially regulated
special constabularies to protect passengers and property. These agencies are authorized by provincial governments and are not related to federally authorized
Railway Safety Act police forces. Railway police have attracted scrutiny and criticism for their privately funded nature and role in investigating train derailments. In 2020, a former
Canadian Pacific Police Service officer alleged that he was ordered to stop investigating a fatal railway derailment to protect the railway's interests.
Provincial police officer patrols the
Ottawa convoy occupation protest in 2022. There are eight provincial police services in Canada, maintained by six provinces, although only five are involved in frontline policing. The
Ontario Provincial Police and
Sûreté du Québec provide provincial police services to
Ontario and
Quebec, respectively; the
Royal Newfoundland Constabulary provides community and provincial police services to select urban communities in
Newfoundland and Labrador; the
Independent Agency Police Service of
Alberta and the
Saskatchewan Marshals Service provide supplemental provincial policing to Alberta and
Saskatchewan; and the
Organized Crime Agency of British Columbia, the
Unité permanente anticorruption, and the
Bureau des enquêtes indépendantes provide specialized criminal law enforcement services in
British Columbia and Quebec. In Ontario, the OPP provides police services to municipalities without independent police forces regardless of whether or not there is a contract in place for them to do so, but contracts enable municipalities to direct police priorities, have a role in selecting detachment commanders, and review police service performance, including complaints, on a regular basis. In Quebec, contract police services are available to any municipality — outside of those in
urban agglomerations — with fewer than 50,000 residents. In 2021, a provincial committee recommended that the population threshold for contract police services be raised to 130,000 residents and that police forces serving populations under this threshold be folded into the Sûreté du Québec. officer speaks with a colleague in her patrol car. The
Royal Newfoundland Constabulary is a provincial police force, but does not provide provincial police services across the entire province. Instead, the responsibility for provincial police services is split between the RCMP, which provides local and provincial police services to
Newfoundland and Labrador's largely rural interior, and the Constabulary, which provides local and provincial police services to the northeast
Avalon Peninsula (metropolitan
St. John's); the
Bay of Islands and the
Humber Valley (metropolitan
Corner Brook); and western
Labrador (
Churchill Falls,
Labrador City, and
Wabush). The
Independent Agency Police Service (IAPS) and
Saskatchewan Marshals Service (SMS) are independent, provincial police services that are currently being established in
Alberta and
Saskatchewan. IAPS was first established in 2024, and hired its first chief of police on July 2, 2025; the service will eventually provide municipal police services under contract as an alternative to the RCMP, as well as general provincial law enforcement services and support to understaffed RCMP detachments under the name "Alberta Sheriffs Police Service". The
Organized Crime Agency of British Columbia (OCABC) is legally defined as a designated policing unit, and is the "core agency" of the
Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit – British Columbia (CFSEU-BC). Despite its status as the core agency of the combined unit, the CFSEU-BC is governed by RCMP policies and procedures rather than the policies and procedures of the OCABC. The
Unité permanente anticorruption was created in 2011 and tasked with investigations into corrupt government procurement practices, but relied on secondments from other police services until 2018, when it became its own police force. Similar oversight agencies exist in other provinces, but are not defined as police services.
Municipal police municipal police force. Municipal police forces make up the bulk of Canadian police services, and are generally responsible for all criminal matters within their jurisdiction. There are municipal police services in nine provinces, with 12 in
British Columbia, seven in
Alberta, 12 in
Saskatchewan, 10 in
Manitoba, 44 in
Ontario, 31 in
Quebec, 10 in
Nova Scotia, and three in
Prince Edward Island. Almost every major city in Canada maintains a municipal police service, and the majority of municipal police forces serve urban areas exclusively. Many rural communities also operate police services, however, and several have only a handful of police officers. The police services in the Town of
Luseland, Saskatchewan, and the
Rural Municipality of Cornwallis, Manitoba both have one officer each. while other provinces allow small police forces to rely on outside resources to routinely supplement their patrols and investigations. Some provinces, such as
Manitoba, do not define a minimum standard of "adequate and effective" policing, while others, such as
Quebec, authorize several tiers of police forces based on the size of the municipality, with the lowest tiers providing only basic patrol and law enforcement functions and the highest tiers responsible for all law enforcement, investigations, and policing in their jurisdiction. scout car. Beginning in the 1970s, and continuing into the 1990s, several municipal police forces were amalgamated (alongside, in many cases, the municipalities they served) into
new, regional organizations in the interest of creating efficiencies and reducing costs. Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia. The adoption of regional policing has been controversial, however, and a review of nine Canadian police services in 2016 found that there were no significant differences in cost or service quality between regional and non-regional police forces, and a separate 2015 literature review found that larger police services are less effective and more expensive than those serving about 50 000 people. As of 2022, police regionalization continues to be proposed by both provinces and municipalities, particularly in metropolitan areas where several urban municipalities that border one another each maintain independent police services.
Strength In 2022, there were 70 566 active police officers in Canada, out of a total authorized strength (the maximum number of officers all the police forces in Canada combined are allowed to hire) of 74 528. Additionally, there were 32 717 non-sworn support personnel employed by police services across the country. Canadian police strength reached a peak in 1975, when there were 206 officers per 100,000 people. Although the current number reflects a significant rise in the total police strength in the country (the highest in twelve years after steady declines in the 1980s and 1990s), Canada still employs fewer police officers per capita than
Wales (262/100,000). Provincially,
Nova Scotia had the highest number of officers per capita (193.8/100,000) in 2019. The lowest numbers per capita were in
Prince Edward Island and
New Brunswick. The
three territories, while having far fewer police officers in absolute terms, have around twice as many police officers per capita as the more populous, less remote provinces. ==Special constabularies==