Canada tick resources — fast navigation
Last updated: January 24, 2026
This hub organizes Canada tick guidance into province pages. Each province page focuses on:
- Common local tick species (with scientific names)
- Seasonality notes (when people are most likely to encounter ticks)
- Dominant pathogens (high-level, with careful wording)
- Official local resources for maps, surveillance, and what to do after a bite
Key takeaways
- Think local: tick species and risk vary by province and by specific area.
- Remove ticks promptly: quick removal helps reduce risk of tick-borne illness.
- Use official resources: risk maps and recommendations can change year-to-year.
Cite this section
All About Ticks. Canada Tick Guide (By Province). Updated 2026-01-24. Sources: PHAC Lyme disease information and monitoring resources.
Primary sources: PHAC - Lyme disease, PHAC - Tick information (monitoring)
Choose your province
British Columbia
Western blacklegged tick notes, Lyme risk map, and resources.
Ticks in British ColumbiaNova Scotia
Province resources on ticks, tick bite services, and safety guidance.
Ticks in Nova ScotiaWhat to do after a tick bite (Canada)
If you’ve removed a tick, your next steps are usually: clean the area, note the date/location, and monitor for symptoms. For step-by-step removal and what to do next:
Prevention baseline
Repellents, clothing, tick checks, and yard strategies.
How to prevent tick bites