Employment outcomes after graduation are one of the most important measures of a Canadian university's real value — and yet they are the factor most obscured by overall ranking tables and marketing materials. This guide gives you the data-driven answer to which Canadian university delivers the best employment outcomes for graduates, broken down by sector and field of study. StudentBuddy helps students make smarter Canadian university choices with resources on university comparisons, programme search, and student accommodation in Canada.
For overall employment outcomes and career earnings, University of Waterloo leads Canada — its co-op programme gives graduates 2 years of professional experience and employer relationships before graduation. By sector: finance (Rotman/UofT, Ivey/Western), medicine (UofT, McMaster, McGill), government (uOttawa, Carleton), technology (Waterloo, UofT, UBC), and engineering (Waterloo, UofT).
| University | Employment rate 6mo post-grad | Avg starting salary | Co-op | Best sectors |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| University of Waterloo | 97%+ | CAD $75K–$120K | 6 terms — 2 yrs experience | Tech, engineering, finance, math |
| Ivey Business School (Western) | 97%+ | CAD $85K–$130K | None (case method) | Finance, consulting, general management |
| University of Toronto | 95%+ | CAD $70K–$110K | Partial (PEY) | Finance, medicine, law, tech, business |
| UBC | 93%+ | CAD $65K–$100K | Available | Tech, business, Pacific Rim, sciences |
| McMaster | 91%+ | CAD $60K–$90K | Available | Health sciences, engineering, business |
| University of Ottawa | 90%+ | CAD $60K–$85K | Available | Government, law, bilingual employers |
| McGill | 90%+ | CAD $65K–$95K | Limited | Medicine, law, finance, research |
| Dalhousie | 88%+ | CAD $55K–$80K | Available | Engineering, ocean science, healthcare |
Why Waterloo leads on employment — the structural reason
Waterloo's employment supremacy is not accidental — it is structural and built over 65 years. The 6 co-op work terms integrated into most programmes mean graduates arrive at their full-time role with approximately 2 years of professional experience already completed. By their final co-op term, most strong Waterloo students in competitive programmes are choosing between multiple full-time offers rather than applying cold to the job market after graduation. The WaterlooWorks platform aggregates hundreds of co-op postings per cycle from every major tech, finance, and engineering employer in North America. Co-op employer relationships become full-time employment relationships at a conversion rate no Canadian career centre approach can match.
Best universities by employment sector
| Sector | Best university | Why | 2nd choice |
|---|---|---|---|
| Software/Tech | University of Waterloo | Co-op pipeline; WaterlooWorks employer network | UofT, UBC |
| Finance/Bay Street | Ivey (Western) / Rotman (UofT) | Case method/Bay Street recruiting relationships | Schulich (York) |
| Medicine | University of Toronto | Largest affiliated hospital network; research | McMaster, McGill |
| Government/Policy | University of Ottawa | Capital proximity; bilingual advantage; co-op | Carleton |
| Consulting | Ivey (Western) | Case method; McKinsey/BCG/Deloitte recruitment | Rotman (UofT) |
| Engineering | University of Waterloo | Co-op + P.Eng pathway + employer relationships | UofT, UBC |
| Nursing/Health | University of Alberta | Large Alberta health system + university relationship | Dalhousie, McMaster |
| Ocean/Environmental | Dalhousie | World-class ocean sciences; NS health system | UBC, University of Guelph |
How to assess employment outcomes correctly
Standard university employment statistics measure "employed 6 months after graduation" and include any employment including unrelated part-time work. More revealing questions: what percentage of graduates work in their field of study within 1 year? What is the average salary of co-op graduates versus non-co-op? What specific employers recruit directly from this programme? Ask these questions directly to each university's career centre or student association before choosing based on headline employment rate statistics.
Choosing your Canadian university for career outcomes? Find your campus accommodation too.
The city your university is in shapes your career access as much as the institution itself. Browse StudentBuddy for verified student accommodation near every major Canadian campus — from Waterloo to Halifax to Vancouver.
Find student accommodation in Canada →Frequently asked questions
For most industries, programme quality and co-op experience matter more than university name alone. However, certain employers actively recruit from specific institutions — Bay Street investment banks strongly prefer Ivey and Rotman; top law firms recruit from UofT and Osgoode; FAANG companies recruit heavily from Waterloo. If your target employer has institutional preferences, this should influence your choice.
For technology and engineering careers: almost always yes. Two years of professional experience and Waterloo's employer network typically produce better entry-level employment outcomes than a UofT degree without co-op. For finance, law, medicine, and research: UofT's academic depth and institutional reputation often provide the advantage. This is a field-specific comparison.
PEY (Professional Experience Year) is UofT's 12–16 month co-op option, typically taken between Years 3 and 4. Waterloo integrates 6 four-month co-op terms across 5 years. Waterloo graduates typically have broader employer exposure and stronger networks from 6 diverse work terms versus Waterloo's one 12–16 month placement. Both are valuable; Waterloo provides more breadth.
Ivey Business School (Western) and Rotman (UofT) consistently have the highest MBA employment rates (95%+) and the highest average post-MBA salaries in Canada. Ivey's Bay Street relationships and case method reputation are particularly powerful for finance placements. Rotman's Toronto location provides the broadest employer access.
Depends on the field. For trades, early childhood education, hospitality, and applied technology, college credentials produce highly employable graduates in their specific sectors. For professional fields requiring licensing (engineering, medicine, law, pharmacy), university degrees are required. For technology and business careers, both college and university paths can lead to TEER 1 employment — the key difference is often the employers who recruit from each type of institution.

