What Is EI (Employment Insurance) in Canada? 2025

Updated March 2025 · 8 min read

Employment Insurance (EI) is a federal program that provides temporary financial support to Canadians who lose their job through no fault of their own, or who need time away from work for specific life events like having a baby, caring for a sick family member, or recovering from illness. Most employed Canadians pay EI premiums every paycheque — and that builds the entitlement to claim benefits when needed.

Who Can Collect EI?

To qualify for regular EI benefits (the kind for job loss), you must:

You generally cannot collect regular EI if you quit voluntarily without just cause, or if you were fired for misconduct. There are exceptions — quitting due to harassment, unsafe working conditions, or following a spouse who was relocated can qualify as just cause.

EI Premium Rates for 2025

EI premiums are deducted automatically from your paycheque:

Self-employed Canadians do not pay EI premiums through employment but can opt in to the self-employed EI program to access special benefits (maternity, parental, caregiving, illness, compassionate care).

How Much Does EI Pay?

EI pays 55% of your average insurable weekly earnings, up to a weekly maximum. For 2025, the maximum weekly EI benefit is approximately $668 per week.

To calculate your weekly benefit: take your total insurable earnings over the best 14–22 weeks (depending on regional unemployment rate) divided by a divisor (14–22), then multiply by 55%.

Example: If your best weeks averaged $1,200/week in insurable earnings, your EI benefit would be $1,200 × 55% = $660/week — just under the maximum.

EI benefits are taxable income. Tax is withheld at source, similar to employment income. You will receive a T4E slip in February showing total EI received and tax withheld.

How Long Can You Collect EI?

The duration of regular EI benefits ranges from 14 to 45 weeks, depending on:

In regions with higher unemployment (like parts of Atlantic Canada or northern communities), people qualify for more weeks of benefits. In regions with low unemployment (like major cities), the minimum hours required is higher and maximum weeks available may be fewer.

The Waiting Period

There is a mandatory one-week waiting period before EI payments begin — you will not receive benefits for your first week of unemployment. Apply as soon as you lose your job; the waiting period begins when Service Canada receives your application.

Types of EI Benefits

EI covers more than just job loss:

Regular Benefits

For people who lose their job through no fault of their own. Up to 45 weeks, 55% of earnings to the weekly maximum.

Maternity Benefits

Up to 15 weeks for the birth parent, starting up to 12 weeks before the expected due date. Pays 55% of earnings (or 33% over an extended period).

Parental Benefits

For parents who are caring for a newborn or newly adopted child. Two options:

Sickness Benefits

Up to 26 weeks for those who cannot work due to illness, injury, or quarantine. Requires a medical certificate.

Caregiving Benefits

For people who take time off to care for a critically ill or injured family member, or a family member who is at significant risk of death. Duration varies by benefit type (8 to 35 weeks depending on the situation).

Compassionate Care Benefits

Up to 26 weeks shared among family members caring for someone with a serious illness who is at significant risk of death within 26 weeks.

Apply immediately. You can lose EI weeks if you delay your application. Apply online at canada.ca/ei as soon as you become unemployed or are about to need benefits. You have up to 4 weeks after becoming unemployed to apply without losing weeks, but sooner is always better.

How to Apply for EI

  1. Go to canada.ca and search "Apply for EI"
  2. Sign in or register for a My Service Canada Account
  3. Complete the online application (takes about 30–60 minutes)
  4. Your employer must provide a Record of Employment (ROE) — either electronically to Service Canada or to you within 5 business days of your last day
  5. Service Canada processes your claim, usually within 28 days
  6. You must submit biweekly reports confirming you are available for work and reporting any earnings

EI and Severance Pay

If you receive a severance package when you are laid off, it may delay the start of your EI benefits. Service Canada may treat severance as earnings during a waiting period. The more severance you receive, the longer before EI kicks in. This is one reason having an emergency fund matters — severance does not always bridge the gap immediately.

Working While on EI

You can work while receiving EI. You must report all earnings. Under the current rules, you can earn up to the higher of $75/week or 40% of your weekly benefit without any clawback. Earnings above that threshold are deducted dollar for dollar from your EI benefit. Part-time work while on EI is common and encouraged.

EI Repayment

If your net income for the year exceeds approximately $79,000 (1.25 times the maximum insurable earnings), you must repay a portion of EI benefits received — up to 30% of the lesser of your net income above the threshold or the total EI received. This is assessed when you file your taxes. It only applies to regular benefits, not special benefits like maternity or parental.

What EI Does Not Cover

This is why an emergency fund matters even if you have EI. EI has gaps, delays, and coverage limits that your personal savings need to fill.

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