Interesting data from this year's
Halifax Index: population growth was
last among 10 benchmark cities last year,
but it was also the third-highest in the city's history. i.e., we grew slowly last year compared to other cities, but we grew like gangbusters compared to the recent past--which shows how crazy growth has gotten in general, nationwide.
Permanent immigration was actually higher than the previous year, so the slowdown is due to two factors, one minor, one major. The minor one is that both interprovincial and intraprovincial growth were slightly negative, which is a change from recent years. (The benchmark cities all have worse outmigration, though, so we're still "ahead" on that metric, though only by not doing as poorly). The real shift seems to be that Halifax experienced a sharp decline in non-permanent residents last year, before that change really hit other cities. My bet is that Halifax's 2025 growth rate is back to being more middle of the pack in Canada/benchmark cities, as that non-permanent reversal hits other CMAs.
More interesting than any of that is where the growth is going in Halifax. Basically: mostly by intensifying the urban core and inner suburbs, but also a pretty substantial amount of "inner rural" development around both Hammonds Plains and Enfield. The peninsula overall grew by 14.5 percent, from 75,000 people to nearly 86,000. Even with the recent growth slowdown, it seems plausible tthat he peninsula will pass 100,000 people by the end of the decade. It also crept up from about 16 percent of the HRM population to about 17 percent. Not a big change, but it is interesting that the region has become slightly more centralized, which I imagine is opposite to the trend in most cities.