Crane operator · Laurentides

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Laurentides

The area, in brief

Construction accounts for 9.7% of employment in the Laurentides, well above the 7.0% Quebec average, driven by projected population growth of 4.7% between 2024 and 2029 — the highest of any region in Quebec. The region is part of the CCQ's Laval–Laurentides–Lanaudière work zone, one of the busiest in Quebec by job site volume.

Residential and multi-unit housingIndustrial and aerospaceInstitutionalResort and hospitality

The rate

$42.18 – $48.45/h (journeyperson, depending on sector and class, May 2025)

Crane operator rates are set by Quebec construction industry collective agreements and vary by sector (residential, institutional-commercial, industrial, civil engineering and roads) and crane operator class. Check the official current CCQ grid: ccq.org/salaire.

Official CCQ grid →

Good to know

Your questions, answered.

I don't have a DEP — can I still become a crane operator?

Yes, there's an alternate path. You can enter the trade through a company training plan (PFE): it includes 120 hours of theoretical-practical training in safe mobile crane lifting, 150 hours supervised by a journeyperson crane operator on site, and an integration exam you need to pass at 80%. Heads up: the exam can't be retaken, so come prepared. If you don't complete the 150 hours, you'll need to do the full DEP instead.

How many hours do I need to become a journeyperson crane operator?

Once you have your apprentice certificate (CCA), you complete two apprenticeship periods of 2,000 hours each — 4,000 hours total on site. After that, you sit the CCQ's provincial qualification exam. Pass it and you get your journeyperson competency certificate (CCC).

Can a crane operator work in any region of Quebec?

Yes, and it's actually common: 35% of crane operators travel between regions for work, versus 16% on average across all construction trades. Big projects are often outside major centres, so regional mobility is a real asset in this trade.