Lost Your Job? Financial Survival Guide for Canadians (2026)
Updated
Apply for Employment Insurance on the day you lose your job — not next week, not after you’ve “figured things out.” EI takes up to 28 days to process with a mandatory one-week unpaid waiting period, which means your first payment won’t arrive for four to five weeks even if you apply immediately. Every day you delay pushes real money further out. EI pays 55% of your average insurable earnings up to $668/week for 14–45 weeks, depending on your hours worked and your region’s unemployment rate.
While waiting for EI, switch to an emergency budget that covers only housing, food, transportation, and minimum debt payments — cancel or pause everything else. If you received a severance package, get an employment lawyer to review it before signing (common law entitlement is often one month per year of service, significantly more than the statutory minimum of one week per year). The order for covering a shortfall matters: use your emergency fund first, then a line of credit, then TFSA withdrawals (contribution room comes back next year), and only touch your RRSP as a genuine last resort — that contribution room is gone forever.
Immediate Action Checklist (Week 1)
Action
Why
Timeline
Apply for EI
Don’t delay — 28-day processing
Day 1
Request ROE from employer
Required for EI
Day 1
Review severance package
Understand what you’re owed
Day 1-3
Create emergency budget
Reduce all non-essential spending
Day 1-3
Review health benefits
Know when coverage ends
Day 1-3
Notify any co-signers
If you have co-signed loans
Day 3-7
Understanding Your Severance
Factor
Details
Statutory minimum
1 week per year of service (Ontario ESA)
Common law entitlement
Often 1 month per year of service (not automatic)
Taxation
Severance is taxable income
EI waiting period
Severance may delay EI start date
Negotiation
You can often negotiate more
Consider consulting an employment lawyer if offered less than expected.
EI Benefits Summary
Feature
Amount
Benefit rate
55% of average earnings
Maximum weekly
$668
Duration
14-45 weeks (depends on hours, regional unemployment)
Contact landlord/lender immediately; ask for deferral
Credit cards
Call to request hardship program, lower payments
Utilities
Most have hardship programs; apply before missing payments
Car payments
Contact lender before missing payment
Student loans
Apply for RAP (Repayment Assistance Plan)
Phone/Internet
Downgrade plan or switch providers
Financial Resources for Unemployed Canadians
Resource
What It Provides
EI (Employment Insurance)
55% income replacement
Provincial social assistance
Ontario Works, BC Employment Assistance, etc.
Food banks
Free groceries
Utility assistance programs
Help with hydro, gas bills
Community organizations
Emergency financial assistance
211 (dial 2-1-1)
Connects you to local resources
Protecting Your Credit
Action
Why
Contact creditors before missing payments
May offer hardship programs
Pay minimum on credit cards
Keeps accounts current
Don’t max out credit cards
High utilization hurts score
Avoid payday loans
Extremely high interest destroys finances
Monitor your credit
Check for errors, track score
Should You Withdraw from RRSP?
Consideration
Details
Tax hit
10-30% withholding immediately, plus tax at year-end
Lost room
Contribution room is gone forever
Lower income year
Tax rate may be lower if unemployed all year
Last resort
After emergency fund, EI, other options exhausted
Better order: Emergency fund → EI → Credit line → TFSA → RRSP (last resort)
The Bottom Line
Apply for EI on day one, switch to an emergency budget immediately, and contact every creditor before you miss a payment — hardship programs exist at virtually every bank, utility, and lender, but they only help if you call proactively. Avoid payday loans at all costs, and if you must draw down savings, follow the order: emergency fund → EI → line of credit → TFSA → RRSP (absolute last resort).