Canada reviews Privacy Act to modernise data protection and digital governance

Federal review of the Privacy Act focuses on secure data reuse and improved public service delivery.

Government of Canada

The Government of Canada has launched a formal review of the Privacy Act, opening a broader effort to modernise how the federal public sector governs personal data in an increasingly digital administrative environment.

Led by the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat and announced by Shafqat Ali, President of the Treasury Board, the process will reassess how more than 250 government institutions collect, use, share, and protect personal information.

The review places particular emphasis on improving how data is managed across government programmes, with reform proposals focused on more secure information-sharing, less duplication, and greater accuracy in public administration. Canadian authorities say the aim is to introduce designated official data sources while ensuring that any reuse of personal information serves individuals directly or delivers a clear public benefit.

The process also points to more structural changes, including recognising privacy as a fundamental right and aligning legal definitions more closely with international standards. It is further intended to harmonise procedures for accessing personal information and to update the federal privacy framework to support a more connected digital state.

Consultations will continue through mid-2026, with feedback expected to feed into a final report in winter 2026–27. Taken together, the review suggests that Canada is rethinking how privacy protection, public-sector data sharing, and institutional accountability should operate in a modern digital governance system.

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