Sector

51 Information and cultural industries

Industrie de l'information et industrie culturelle

Subsectors

Next level

Fully clickable cards for the next layer in the hierarchy.

512 8 Canadian industries
Subsector
Motion picture and sound recording industries

This subsector comprises establishments primarily engaged in producing and distributing video and audio recordings or providing related ser...

Industry groups 2
Canadian industries 8
Open item ->
513 7 Canadian industries
Subsector
Publishing industries

This subsector comprises establishments primarily engaged in publishing newspapers, periodicals, books, databases, software and other works.

Industry groups 2
Canadian industries 7
Open item ->
516 5 Canadian industries
Subsector
Broadcasting and content providers

This subsector comprises establishments primarily engaged in operating radio or television broadcasting stations for programming and transm...

Industry groups 2
Canadian industries 5
Open item ->
517 4 Canadian industries
Subsector
Telecommunications

This subsector comprises establishments primarily engaged in providing telecommunications and/or video entertainment services over their ow...

Industry groups 3
Canadian industries 4
Open item ->
518 1 Canadian industries
Subsector
Computing infrastructure providers, data processing, web hosting, and related services

This subsector comprises establishments primarily engaged in providing the infrastructure for data processing, hosting, and related service...

Industry groups 1
Canadian industries 1
Open item ->
519 3 Canadian industries
Subsector
Web search portals, libraries, archives, and all other information services

This subsector comprises establishments, not classified to any other industry, primarily engaged in providing other information services.

Industry groups 1
Canadian industries 3
Open item ->

Official definition

This sector comprises establishments primarily engaged in producing and distributing (except by wholesale and retail methods) information and cultural products. Establishments providing the means to transmit or distribute these products or providing access to equipment and expertise for processing data are also included. The unique characteristics of information and cultural products, and of the processes involved in their production and distribution, distinguish this sector from the goods-producing and services-producing sectors. The value of these products lies in their information, educational, cultural or entertainment content, not in the format in which they are distributed. Distribution of these information and cultural products via the Internet are included. Most of these products are protected from unlawful reproduction by copyright laws. Only those possessing the rights to these works are authorized to reproduce, alter, improve and distribute them. Acquiring and using these rights often involves significant costs. The intangible nature of the content of information and cultural products allows for their distribution in various forms. For example, a movie can be shown at a movie theatre, on a television broadcast, through video on demand, or rented online; a sound recording can be aired on radio, distributed online, or sold at a record store; software can be bought at retail outlets or downloaded from the Internet; a newspaper can be purchased at a newsstand or read online. In addition, improvements in information technology are revolutionizing the distribution of these products. The inclusion in this sector of telecommunications services providers reflects the increasingly important role these establishments play in making these products accessible to the public. The main components of this sector are the motion picture and sound recording industries, the publishing industries, the broadcasting and content providers industries, the telecommunications industries, the computing infrastructure providers, data processing and hosting services industries, and the web search portals, libraries, archives, and other information services industries. There are establishments engaged in culture-related activities that are classified in other sectors of NAICS. The most important are listed as exclusions below.

Classification Reference

Official classification fields for this page

Official classification fields taken from the current StatCan source bundle.

Characteristic Description
Official titleInformation and cultural industries
ClassificationNAICS Canada 2022 Version 1.0
Publishing authorityStatistics Canada
Hierarchical levelSector
Parent codeTop-level sector
International correspondenceISIC Rev. 4; harmonized with US and Mexico NAICS at higher levels.
Sourcehttps://www.statcan.gc.ca/en/subjects/standard/naics/2022/v1/index
Source verification2026-05-05
Canada Business Context

Canada-wide tax and filing context

Canada-wide business, tax, and filing context from the local country pack and tax pack.

Characteristic Description
Tax authorityCanada Revenue Agency (CRA)
Business identifierBusiness Number (BN): 9-digit identifier with program account suffixes such as RT0001 for GST/HST, RP0001 for payroll, and RC0001 for corporate income tax.
Filing requirementsBusiness Number registration; Form T2125 (Statement of Business or Professional Activities) attached to T1; Form T2 (Corporation Income Tax Return); Form T5013; Form GST34
Sector authorityOffice of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada and Quebec Law 25 authorities

Exclusions

  • design activities (See 54 Professional, scientific and technical services)
  • duplicating information or cultural products in print form, or in the form of optical or magnetic media (See 31-33 Manufacturing)
  • performing in artistic productions, and creating artistic and cultural works or productions as independent individuals (See 71 Arts, entertainment and recreation)
  • preserving and exhibiting objects, sites, and natural wonders of historical, cultural and/or educational value (See 71 Arts, entertainment and recreation)
  • producing live presentations that involve the performances of actors and actresses, singers, dancers, musical groups and artists, and other performing artists (See 71 Arts, entertainment and recreation)
  • retailing information and cultural products such as newspapers, books, software and sound recordings (See 44-45 Retail trade)
  • wholesaling information and cultural products such as newspapers, books, software, videocassettes, DVDs and sound recordings (See 41 Wholesale trade)

Classification Confidence Score

3 of 5 factors passing

6/ 10
Verified official sourcenaics-scian-2022-structure-v1-eng.csv (2026-05-05)
International crosswalkNo international correspondence found
Previous edition migrationNAICS 2017 to 2022 continuity confirmed
Complete hierarchy1 levels confirmed in hierarchy
Size or threshold documentedNot applicable for hub levels
Trade or export matchNo direct HS code correspondence in current bundle
Legacy crosswalkLegacy system (SIC 1980) retired in this region
Business Profiles

When you might need code 51

Professions specific to this sector are linked to this part of the Canadian classifier so the page speaks to real work teams.

01 51
Digital publisher

Use this page when the file covers online editorial products, digital subscriptions, content release planning, and ad placements. It helps confirm whether 51 Information and cultural industries is the closest NAICS Canada branch before BN registration, GST/HST review, banking onboarding, procurement notes, or internal classification work.

02 51
Telecom network product manager

Use this page when the file covers telecom offerings, subscriber products, network service packaging, and rollout plans. It helps confirm whether 51 Information and cultural industries is the closest NAICS Canada branch before BN registration, GST/HST review, banking onboarding, procurement notes, or internal classification work.

03 51
Film post-production coordinator

Use this page when the file covers edit suites, sound finishing, delivery masters, and post workflow. It helps confirm whether 51 Information and cultural industries is the closest NAICS Canada branch before BN registration, GST/HST review, banking onboarding, procurement notes, or internal classification work.

04 51
Data processing service operator

Use this page when the file covers hosted processing jobs, database runs, batch output, and managed platform services. It helps confirm whether 51 Information and cultural industries is the closest NAICS Canada branch before BN registration, GST/HST review, banking onboarding, procurement notes, or internal classification work.

Business Map

Business categories in this branch

A rotating set of business activity examples linked to this part of the Canadian hierarchy.

Streaming mediaData processingPlatform servicesTelecom operationsTelecommunications

Commonly confused with

54 — Professional, scientific and technical services

design activities (See 54 Professional, scientific and technical services)

71 — Arts, entertainment and recreation

performing in artistic productions, and creating artistic and cultural works or productions as inde...

41 — Wholesale trade

wholesaling information and cultural products such as newspapers, books, software, videocassettes,...

Source row

51Information and cultural industries

This page mirrors the source row from the structure CSV and the matching rows from the elements and crosswalk files.

Frequently asked questions

What does code 51 cover?

Information and cultural industries: This sector comprises establishments primarily engaged in producing and distributing (except by wholesale and retail methods) information and cultural products. Establishments providing the means to transmit or distribute these products or providing access to...

Which level of the hierarchy is 51?

It is a sector page in the NAICS Canada 2026 hierarchy.

What is the parent of 51?

This page sits at the top sector level and has no parent page above it.

Should I stop at 51 or go lower?

6 lower-level item(s) sit under this branch: Motion picture and sound recording industries, Publishing industries, Broadcasting and content providers, Telecommunications.

Are official inclusion notes attached to 51?

No inclusion rows are attached to this page in the local elements file.

Are there exclusion notes for 51?

Yes. 7 exclusion note(s) help separate this page from nearby codes.

Does 51 include illustrative examples?

No example rows are attached on this page in the local elements file.

What kinds of businesses often start from this page?

Examples in this branch include Streaming media, Data processing, Platform services, Telecom operations, Telecommunications.

Is there an ISIC mapping for 51?

No ISIC correspondence row is attached to this page.

Does this page show a US NAICS reference?

No same-code US NAICS reference row is attached on this page.

Why are both English and French titles shown?

NAICS Canada is bilingual, so the page keeps both language titles visible for comparison and lookup.

Where does the page text come from?

From the local StatCan structure file, elements file, ISIC crosswalk, and the bundled US 6-digit reference workbook.