The Economics and Statistics Division maintains archives of previous publications for accountability purposes, but makes no updates to keep these documents current with the latest data revisions from Statistics Canada. As a result, information in older documents may not be accurate. Please exercise caution when referring to older documents. For the latest information and historical data, please contact the individual listed to the right.
<--- Return to Archive
For additional information relating to this article, please contact:
September 26, 2025FOOD SERVICES AND DRINKING PLACES, JULY 2025 Monthly (July 2025 vs June 2025, seasonally adjusted)

Nova Scotia food services and drinking places receipts edged up 0.2% to $204.2 million. Canada's food services and drinking places receipts increased by 0.1% to $8.52 billion. Across Canada, five provinces reported increased receipts for food services and drinking places, Manitoba reported the fastest growth while Prince Edward Island had the steepest decline.
Year-over-year (July 2025 vs July 2024)
Nova Scotia food services and drinking places receipts increased 8.8% year-over-year - fastest among provinces. Canada's food services and drinking places receipts increased 6.8%. There were year-over-year gains in all provinces. Prince Edward Island reported the smallest gain.

Year-to-date (January-July 2025 vs January-July 2024)
Nova Scotia's year-to-date food services and drinking places receipts increased 7.3%. Nationally food services and drinking places receipts increased 6.4%. All provinces reported a year-to-date increase in receipts. New Brunswick reported the fastest percentage gain in year-to-date food service receipts while Manitoba reported the smallest increase.

Nova Scotia's year-to-date gains in food service receipts (in value terms) are mainly attributable to the increases in limited and full service eating places, while there were smaller rises at special food services (mobile, and catering). Nova Scotia drinking places reported slightly lower year-to-date receipts compared to the same period last year.

Special food services reported the strongest growth in percentage terms, while drinking places reported a decline.

Trends
Nova Scotia's food service receipts exhibit more volatility than national food service receipts, but in recent months Nova Scotia's receipts have grown faster than the national trend.

Source: Statistics Canada. Table 21-10-0019-01 Monthly survey of food services and drinking places (x 1,000)
<--- Return to Archive