Updated for 2025 · ESA minimums · Common law notice · Ontario focus
Being laid off or terminated is one of the most financially stressful events an employee can face. Understanding your severance rights is critical — employers often offer the minimum required under employment standards legislation, when employees may actually be entitled to significantly more under common law. This guide explains both layers and how to navigate a severance offer.
In Canada (using Ontario as the primary example), employees have rights under two separate systems:
Your employment contract may specify notice provisions — but they must be at least equal to ESA minimums to be enforceable.
| Years of Service | Minimum Notice Period |
|---|---|
| Less than 1 year | 1 week |
| 1 year to under 3 years | 2 weeks |
| 3 years to under 4 years | 3 weeks |
| 4 years to under 5 years | 4 weeks |
| 5 years to under 6 years | 5 weeks |
| 6 years to under 7 years | 6 weeks |
| 7 years to under 8 years | 7 weeks |
| 8+ years | 8 weeks |
Separate from notice pay, Ontario employees are entitled to statutory severance pay if:
Severance pay = 1 week per year of service (including partial years) up to a maximum of 26 weeks.
Unless your employment contract validly limits severance to ESA minimums, you're entitled to "reasonable notice" under common law — which courts determine based on:
The landmark "Bardal factors" from the 1960 Ontario case remain the standard. For many employees, common law notice substantially exceeds ESA minimums:
| Years of Service | Age | Typical Common Law Range |
|---|---|---|
| 2 years | 35 | 2-4 months |
| 5 years | 40 | 5-8 months |
| 10 years | 45 | 10-18 months |
| 15 years | 50 | 14-22 months |
| 20+ years | 55+ | 18-24 months (courts generally cap at 24 months) |
Severance is not just base salary. A complete severance package should include or address:
Amounts paid in excess of ESA minimums are typically structured as a "retiring allowance" (T4 Box 66/67). A portion may be eligible for a tax-sheltered RRSP transfer:
Despite the loss of the pre-1996 sheltering, you can use your regular available RRSP room to shelter retiring allowance amounts received — contribute the severance to your RRSP if room exists.
ESA minimum notice and severance pay are considered regular employment income — EI deductions may apply and benefit continuation matters. Common law damages above ESA minimums are retiring allowances for tax purposes.
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Get KOHO Free — Use Code 45ET55JSYASeverance pay allocated to the notice period delays EI eligibility by the number of weeks the severance represents. A lump sum characterized as "pay in lieu of notice" is allocated week by week, delaying EI. A retiring allowance (amounts above ESA minimums) does not delay EI in most cases. This is a complex area — consult Service Canada or an employment lawyer.
If your employment contract has a valid, unambiguous termination clause that clearly limits your notice entitlement, you may be limited to what the contract specifies — provided it meets or exceeds ESA minimums. Many termination clauses are unenforceable because they don't explicitly provide for all ESA entitlements or use ambiguous language. Always have an employment lawyer review your contract.
Yes. Each province has its own Employment Standards Act with different notice and severance schedules. British Columbia, Alberta, Quebec, and other provinces have their own rules. The common law framework applies nationally, though provincial courts may apply it slightly differently. This guide focuses on Ontario as the most populous province.
This guide is for informational purposes and focuses primarily on Ontario. Employment law varies by province. Always consult an employment lawyer before signing a severance release.