Skip to main content

My Employer Owes Me Vacation Pay in Canada: What To Do

Updated

Vacation pay is not a perk — it is a legal entitlement. If your employer owes you vacation pay that hasn’t been paid, you can recover it through your provincial employment standards office.

The short answer

Calculate what you are owed, request it in writing from your employer, and if they do not pay, file a complaint with your provincial employment standards office. It is free, and the government investigates on your behalf.

How vacation pay is calculated in Canada

Vacation pay is based on a percentage of your gross wages. Employers may hold it in a bank and pay it before vacations, or pay it out on each paycheque.

Years of ServiceMinimum Vacation PayMinimum Vacation Time
Less than 1 year4% of gross wagesPro-rated 2 weeks
1–4 years4% of gross wages2 weeks
5+ years6% of gross wages3 weeks

These are provincial minimums. Your employment contract may provide more.

Gross wages includes: regular pay, overtime, commissions, bonuses (if regular), statutory holiday pay, and shift premiums. It does not include vacation pay already paid out.

Province-by-province minimum vacation pay

ProvinceRate (after 1 year)Rate (after 5 years)
Ontario4% (2 weeks)6% (3 weeks)
British Columbia4% (2 weeks)6% (3 weeks)
Alberta4% (2 weeks)6% (3 weeks)
Quebec4% (2 weeks + 1 day)6% (3 weeks)
Manitoba4% (2 weeks)6% (3 weeks) after 5 years
Saskatchewan3/52 of wages (3 weeks)4/52 (4 weeks) after 10 years
Nova Scotia4% (2 weeks)6% (3 weeks) after 8 years
Federal jurisdiction4% (2 weeks)6% (3 weeks) after 5 years

Saskatchewan has among the most generous minimums in the country.

When vacation pay is commonly withheld or disputed

  • On termination: Your employer must include all accrued vacation pay in your final paycheque. This is one of the most common wage violations.
  • Mid-year: If your employer never provided vacation time throughout the year, you are still owed the pay.
  • Contractor misclassification: If you were treated as an employee in practice, you may be entitled to vacation pay even if your contract said otherwise.

Step 1: Calculate the amount owed

Add up your total gross wages over the period in question and multiply by your applicable percentage (4% or 6%). If you were paid vacation pay on your paycheques already, subtract what was paid.

Step 2: Request payment in writing

Email your employer or HR department with a short message stating the amount owed, the period it covers, and a payment deadline. This creates a record. Keep a copy.

Step 3: File an employment standards complaint

If your employer does not pay, file a complaint with your provincial employment standards office. Filing is free. An officer will contact your employer, investigate, and can order full repayment plus interest.

ProvinceEmployment Standards Complaint
OntarioMinistry of Labour — ontario.ca/labour
British ColumbiaEmployment Standards Branch — gov.bc.ca
AlbertaEmployment Standards — alberta.ca
QuebecCNESST — cnesst.gouv.qc.ca
Federal employeesCanada Labour Program — canada.ca/labour

What your employer cannot do

  • Refuse to pay vacation pay because you didn’t take the time off
  • Take back vacation pay already earned
  • Substitute unpaid overtime for vacation time without written agreement
  • Reduce vacation pay when you leave

Key takeaway

Vacation pay is earned wages. If your employer hasn’t paid it out — whether during employment or at termination — calculate the amount, put your request in writing, and file with employment standards if needed.

Minimum vacation entitlements by province (2026)

ProvinceMinimum vacation timeMinimum vacation pay
Ontario2 weeks (after 1 year); 3 weeks (after 5 years)4% (2 weeks); 6% (5+ years)
BC2 weeks (after 1 year); 3 weeks (after 5 years)4%; 6%
Alberta2 weeks (after 1 year); 3 weeks (after 5 years)4%; 6%
Quebec1 week (first year); 2 weeks (1–5 years); 3 weeks (5+ years)4%; 6%
Saskatchewan3 weeks (after 1 year); 4 weeks (after 10 years)6%; 8%
Manitoba2 weeks (after 1 year); 3 weeks (after 5 years)4%; 6%
Federal2 weeks (under 5 years); 3 weeks (5–9 years); 4 weeks (10+ years)4%; 6%; 8%

Frequently asked questions

Can my employer pay vacation pay as a percentage on each paycheque? In some provinces, yes. Employers can pay vacation pay as an accrual (e.g., 4% added to each pay) instead of as a separate vacation period. However, this does not eliminate the right to take actual paid time off — it covers only the pay component. Check your province’’s rules on whether time off is mandatory separately.

What happens to unused vacation pay when I quit or am terminated? Accrued, unused vacation pay must be paid out as part of your final paycheque in virtually every province. Your employer cannot withhold it, nor can they require you to forfeit it as a condition of leaving. File a wage claim if it is not paid within the required final pay deadline.

Does vacation pay apply to part-time employees? Yes. Vacation pay entitlements apply to part-time, casual, and temporary employees in most provinces. The 4% minimum is calculated on all insurable earnings — the entitlement is proportional to hours worked but is not eliminated for part-time status.


→ Back to: Personal Finance Guide