-

Linesight: Canada’s Construction Growth Continues in 2026, but Power, Planning, and Workforce Constraints Are Shaping Delivery

Public investment, data centers, and life sciences underpin activity as execution readiness becomes critical

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Canada’s construction industry is forecast to grow by 2.6% in 2026, supported by public investment and continued activity across data centers, life sciences, infrastructure, and high-tech industrial projects, according to Linesight’s latest Construction Market Insights: Americas report. Growth is being underpinned by major public programs, AI-focused digital infrastructure funding, and continued investment in biomanufacturing, vaccines, therapeutics, and research facilities.

Canada’s wider economic outlook remains modest, with GDP growth forecast at 1.5% in 2026 and 1.9% in 2027, although weaker momentum in early 2026 means that outlook may still shift. Construction activity remains positive, but growth is becoming increasingly selective. Power availability, planning requirements, and specialist workforce capacity are shaping where projects can proceed with confidence, particularly beyond established delivery hubs.

Supply chain constraints remain a delivery risk

Supply chain conditions continue to influence delivery certainty in Canada, particularly for power‑intensive and specialist projects. While equipment availability remains uneven, delivery risk is increasingly shaped by the interaction between procurement timelines, power access, and planning requirements. In this context, early supplier engagement and realistic sequencing remain essential to maintaining schedules.

“Canada’s construction market continues to grow, but delivery is becoming more constrained,” said Patrick Ryan, Executive Vice President of the Americas at Linesight. “Projects that secure power early, engage suppliers ahead of procurement, and align procurement timing with workforce availability are better positioned to progress with confidence in a tightening delivery environment.”

Construction inflation remains elevated but stable

Canada’s construction inflation is expected to hold in the 3% to 4% range in 2026. While subdued macroeconomic conditions are weighing on overall demand, tariffs on metals, labor shortages, and specialist trade requirements continue to pressure budgets, timelines, and procurement planning, particularly for complex and technical projects reliant on imported equipment and materials.

Commodity pricing reflects trade exposure and energy costs

Commodity markets continue to influence construction costs across Canada, with pricing shaped less by cyclical demand and more by tariffs, trade exposure, energy costs, and logistics pressures.

  • Copper: Prices rose 14% quarter-on-quarter in early 2026, driven by tariff-related buying, infrastructure demand, and constrained mine supply.
  • Aluminum: Prices increased 11% quarter-on-quarter, supported by tighter supply and higher global prices.
  • Steel flat: Prices are forecast to rise 18% quarter-on-quarter, with movement still shaped by trade policy and supply conditions.
  • Diesel: Costs increased 11% quarter-on-quarter as geopolitical disruption and crude market volatility pushed through to transport and equipment pricing.

The Construction Market Insights: Americas – June 2026 report can be read in full here.

About Linesight.

Linesight is a multinational consultancy firm with over 50 years' experience, providing cost, schedule, program and project management services to sectors including life sciences, commercial, data centers, high-tech industrial, residential, hospitality, healthcare and retail. Linesight’s specialist project teams, each with specific skills and experience, provide certainty in project delivery, greater cost efficiency and maximum value for money for their clients.

Contacts

Christine Bernard
Marketing Manager, Americas
christine.bernard@linesight.com

Linesight


Release Versions

Contacts

Christine Bernard
Marketing Manager, Americas
christine.bernard@linesight.com

More News From Linesight

Growth Is Returning to US Construction, but Power, Labor, and Procurement Are Now Setting the Pace, Says Linesight

NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The US construction industry is returning to growth, driven by infrastructure and data center investment, but delivery constraints are now setting the pace according to Linesight’s latest Construction Market Insights: Americas report. Power access, planning requirements, and shortages in skilled MEP trades and contractor capacity are extending timelines and increasing risk. Following a 2.7% contraction in 2025, US construction output is forecast to grow by around 1.1%...

Recovery Takes Hold as Infrastructure and Renewables Accelerate Canada’s Construction Growth Into 2026, says Linesight

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--According to Linesight’s latest Construction Market Insights report, Canada’s construction industry is expected to have rebounded with 2.2% growth in 2025 after two years of contraction. The recovery is led by infrastructure and renewable energy projects, alongside industrial construction gains in chemical and pharmaceutical sectors. From 2026 to 2029, construction output is expected to grow at an average annual rate of 2.8%, driven by major investment in transport, re...

Resilience in the US Construction Industry Projected for 2026 as Mission-Critical Investment Offsets 2025 Slowdown, says Linesight

NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Linesight today released its latest Construction Market Insights report, signaling a resilient outlook for the US construction industry after a softer 2025. While output is projected to have contracted by 2.7% in 2025 following 6.5% growth in 2024, momentum in data centers, transport infrastructure, semiconductors and advanced manufacturing is set to drive steady growth in 2026. Looking ahead, the US construction industry is expected to grow at an average annual rate...
Back to Newsroom