Objective:The purpose of this study was to investigate the demographic characteristics, academic training and types of professional activities of clinical neuropsychologists in Canada. Method: 282 participants completed the online-based survey. Results: Most respondents were women with a mean age of 43 years. They typically had doctoral-level training (85%) and about one-quarter had postdoctoral training (23%). Nearly half (47%) had a lifespan practice, over one-third (37%) had an adults-only practice, and about one-sixth (16%) had an exclusively pediatric practice.Most worked full-time (79%) almost evenly split three ways between the public sector the private sector or both sectors simultaneously. The most common professional activities related to assessment (95%), although clinical supervision (43%), and rehabilitation (42%) were also quite frequent, whereas research (27%) and teaching (18%) were less so. The most common reason for referral was to obtain a diagnosis (79%). Pediatric neuropsychologists worked primarily with individuals with neurodevelopmental disorders and neuropsychologists working with adult populations worked primarily with individuals with emotional disorders, acquired neuropsychological disorders (traumatic brain injury, stroke/vascular), and neurocognitive disorders (dementia). Conclusions: Canadian neuropsychologists seem to benefit from a fairly balanced situation considering that the level of training and the ratio of neuropsychologists per capita are both high. On the other hand, the level of training and the rate of neuropsychologist per capita vary widely between regions of Canada, which suggests a need to standardize training across the country.