Thursday, June 25, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canada Post reports record $1.57-billion loss in 2025

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Apr, 2026 06:40 PM
  • Canada Post reports record $1.57-billion loss in 2025

Canada Post has released its annual report, detailing a $1.57-billion loss before tax for 2025.

The Crown corporation said in a news release the record loss highlights the need to transform and move away from cash injections.

The report said the company’s annual loss widened by $728 million, or 86.7 per cent, compared to a loss of $841 million the year before. 

Revenue for the year declined by $315 million, or 4.7 per cent, compared to 2024, as parcel volumes fell "sharply" in large part due to labour uncertainty throughout 2025.

Canada Post workers started voting Monday on a five-year contract agreement that follows labour strife and their union leader urging they reject the deal.

Canada Post and the union have sparred over wages and structural changes to the postal service for more than two years, and workers have taken to the picket line multiple times.

Both sides have agreed not to engage in any strike or lockout activity while the ratification votes take place, though employees are also casting ballots on whether to authorize a strike mandate, in case they reject the contract.

While 60 per cent of the union board endorsed the contract saying it ensures job security, the union's president has asked members to reject the deal, saying it rolls back rights and compensation.

The Crown corporation has recorded more than $5 billion in losses since 2018, faced with a significant reduction in letter mail and growing competition for package delivery.

Monday's news release said Canada Post’s financial situation deteriorated significantly in 2025 as labour uncertainty weighed on the business, and decades-old rules and frameworks continued to "impede the company’s modernization and its ability to compete."

In 2025, it said parcel volumes fell by 79 million pieces, or 32.6 per cent, compared to the prior year.

"The severity of the corporation’s financial situation underscores the urgency to transform and meet the modern needs of the country," it said. 

"Building on the federal government’s decision to lift long-standing policy and regulatory restrictions, Canada Post is proceeding with transformative measures to return the company to financial sustainability and renew the postal service to meet the needs of Canadians and Canadian businesses in today’s economy."

Ottawa announced a series of reforms to Canada Post late last year in an effort to save the Crown corporation millions of dollars annually.

Canada Post said last week it's starting preliminary work to convert addresses that receive door-to-door mail to community mailboxes, and to phase out some post offices.

Canada Post said it's converting about four million addresses to community mailboxes and the work is expected to take about five years, with different regions moving to community mailboxes each year.

The corporation said it's starting discussions with 13 communities across Canada — including Ottawa and Winnipeg — as it prepares to move about 136,000 addresses from door-to-door delivery to community mailboxes in late 2026 and early 2027.

Canada Post said it's also reviewing its retail network in preparation for closures of urban and suburban post offices in areas it says are currently over-served.

The federal government last year ended a decades-long moratorium on rural post office closures, a move that sparked concern about the future of mail delivery in remote communities that aren't well served by private couriers.

Canada Post said it's conducting market reviews to gather data on local post offices.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christinne Muschi

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. Conservative attacks 'super angry' Indigenous colleague over residential schools

B.C. Conservative attacks 'super angry' Indigenous colleague over residential schools
Dallas Brodie didn't name anyone, but appeared to single out the Conservatives' house leader, A'aliya Warbus, by criticizing an Indigenous woman who sided with the governing NDP to criticize Brodie. Warbus is the only Indigenous woman in the Opposition ranks

B.C. Conservative attacks 'super angry' Indigenous colleague over residential schools

Canadians should expect AI-enabled foreign meddling in election: cybersecurity centre

Canadians should expect AI-enabled foreign meddling in election: cybersecurity centre
In a new report, the Canadian Centre for Cyber Security says it expects individuals affiliated with the Chinese government will continue to target diaspora communities, pushing narratives favourable to Beijing's interests on social media platforms. Cybercriminals are also likely to take advantage of election-related opportunities to perpetrate scams, says the centre, which is an arm of Canada's cyberspy agency, the Communications Security Establishment. 

Canadians should expect AI-enabled foreign meddling in election: cybersecurity centre

B.C. to get about $3.7 billion in tobacco lawsuit settlement

B.C. to get about $3.7 billion in tobacco lawsuit settlement
British Columbia Attorney General Niki Sharma says B.C.'s share of a landmark settlement for health damages from the big tobacco firms will be about $3.7 billion. It's part of a $32.5-billion Canadian settlement between JTI-Macdonald Corp., Rothmans, Benson & Hedges and Imperial Tobacco Canada Ltd. and their creditors after more than five years of negotiations.

B.C. to get about $3.7 billion in tobacco lawsuit settlement

B.C. poised to toll U.S. trucks driving to Alaska through province in tariff response

B.C. poised to toll U.S. trucks driving to Alaska through province in tariff response
British Columbia will introduce legislation in the coming days that would give it the ability to levy fees on commercial trucks travelling from the United States through the province to Alaska, Premier David Eby said.  The move against Alaska-bound trucks is part of a series of responses the province is planning after the "unprecedented attack" from the United States that put a 25 per cent tariff on many Canadian goods.

B.C. poised to toll U.S. trucks driving to Alaska through province in tariff response

Canada halts second tariff wave after Trump announces pause

Canada halts second tariff wave after Trump announces pause
Finance Minister Dominic LeBlanc says Canada has suspended a second wave of retaliatory tariffs after U.S. President Donald Trump signed an executive order to pause some duties.

Canada halts second tariff wave after Trump announces pause

Former Canadian Olympic athlete added to FBI's 10 most wanted fugitives list

Former Canadian Olympic athlete added to FBI's 10 most wanted fugitives list
Ryan James Wedding is wanted for allegedly leading an organized crime group that moved large shipments of cocaine from Colombia through Mexico and California to Canada and other locations in the United States.

Former Canadian Olympic athlete added to FBI's 10 most wanted fugitives list