For each of the federal electoral districts in the City of Toronto, the ethnic groups with 5% of more of population are shown, in a rough correspondence with community councils and pre-amalgamation municipalities (highest % for each ethnic group as well the most populous ethnic group in a riding, if a visible minority – are shown in bold): For each of the federal electoral districts in the City of Toronto, the ethnic origin groups with 7% of more of population are shown, in a rough correspondence with community councils and pre-amalgamation municipalities (highest % for each ethnic group as well the most populous ethnic group in a riding – if not Canadian or English, which are the most frequent ones - are shown in bold): Top ethnic origin per Toronto ward (as designated by the City of Toronto; 2011 Census data - total responses), Top ethnic origin per Toronto neighbourhood (as designated by the City of Toronto; 2006 Census data - total responses). Listings in Toronto show that the average price of homes sold in the city has risen to over $1 million. Unfortunately, the city’s inflated real estate market means that buying a home is out of reach for many young people in the city, who are relegated to renting or to moving outside the city if they would like to purchase a home. With 6.2 million people living in the urban area, Toronto has almost double the population of Canad’s next most populated city, Montreal.Experts predict that by 2035, the city’s population will have gained another 1 million residents. 5, page 99, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Demographics_of_Toronto&oldid=979659953, Articles with unsourced statements from January 2017, Articles with unsourced statements from June 2019, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License, For population figures for Toronto within its pre-1998 city limits, see. 49% of the city's population belong to a visible minority group (compared to 14% in 1981), and visible minorities are expected to hit a majority of 63% of the Toronto CMA population by 2017. The city's religious makeup also includes Islam with 5.5% (including large number of Sunni and Ahmadiyya members), Hinduism (4.1%), Judaism (3.5%), Buddhism (2.1%), Sikh (1%), and other communities; 16.6% reported no religious affiliation.[42]. Toronto's population grew by 4.3% from 2011 to 2016, with an annual growth rate of 0.86%. Toronto’s Downtown and Centres areas had 666,980 jobs in 2019, which equates to about 42.5 per cent of all employment in the city. The demographics of Toronto, Ontario, Canada make Toronto one of the most multicultural and multiracial cities in the world. Unlike Miami, Toronto has no dominant culture or nationality, which also makes it one of the world's most diverse cities. Nearly half the population of Toronto is foreign-born, with 50% of the population identifies as white, while the rest identify as East Indian, South Asian, Black, Southeast Asian, Latin American, West Asian, and Arab.