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EI While in School Canada: Can You Collect EI and Go to School at the Same Time?

Updated

Collecting EI while in school is rarely permitted — but there are specific, well-defined exceptions that let you study and keep your benefits. Start with the first-time EI guide if you need the basic claim sequence first.

Quick-reference: school and EI scenarios

SituationEI continues?Notes
Full-time school, self-initiatedNoDeemed unavailable for work
Part-time school, genuinely available for workMaybeCase-by-case availability assessment
Approved/referred training (full-time)YesMust be approved BEFORE starting
Evening or weekend course onlyUsually yesMust not restrict daytime availability
Online part-time course (low hours)Usually yesDeclare on biweekly report
Employer-sponsored training during layoffYesCoordinated with Service Canada
School not declared on biweekly reportsNo — fraudRepayment + potential penalty

The availability-for-work requirement

EI is only payable when you are “capable of and available for work and unable to obtain suitable employment.” School creates an availability problem because:

  • Fixed class schedules make you unavailable for normal work shifts
  • Academic deadlines and exams may restrict when you can start a new job
  • Full-time study implies your primary commitment is not seeking employment

What Service Canada looks for:

  • How many hours per week do your classes take?
  • Can you accept day-shift, evening-shift, or overnight work?
  • Have you been actively applying for jobs during the claim period?
  • Is school your primary focus, or employment?

Part-time study with genuinely flexible availability is often permissible — but you must be able to honestly report that you are available for and actively seeking full-time work.


Approved training: the full-time school exception

Approved (referred) training is the only scenario where full-time school and EI are fully compatible.

How to get an approved training referral

  1. Contact Service Canada or a provincial Employment Service before enrolling
  2. Explain your employment barriers and how the training will address them
  3. Service Canada or the provincial office assesses whether the training is appropriate
  4. If approved, they issue a referral letter confirming EI continues during training
  5. You enrol in the program; EI payments continue for the approved duration

Important: You cannot retroactively get a referral. If you enrol first and apply for approval after, the training is almost never approved. The decision must precede enrolment.

Training programs typically approved

Program typeExample
Trades certificationElectrical apprenticeship
Healthcare credentialsPSW certificate
Technology skillsCoding bootcamp (6–12 weeks)
Language trainingEnglish/French for employment
Professional recertificationAccounting designation courses

Part II EI Employment Benefits

If you are not currently on regular EI but have insurable employment hours in the past 5 years, you may access Part II benefits — essentially career and skills funding.

Province/TerritoryProgram nameContact
OntarioEmployment Ontarioontario.ca/page/employment-ontario
British ColumbiaWorkBCworkbc.ca
AlbertaAlberta Supports to Employmentalberta.ca/employment-training-financial-support
QuebecServices Québecemploiquebec.gouv.qc.ca
All othersService Canada locationsservicecanada.gc.ca

Part II programs can fund:

  • Tuition and books
  • Child care during training
  • Tools and equipment
  • Transportation to training

What to do before enrolling in school while on EI

Step 1: Call Service Canada at 1-800-206-7218 before you register for any course.

Step 2: Ask explicitly: “Will this course affect my EI eligibility? Can I get a training referral?”

Step 3: Get any approval in writing (a reference number, letter, or decision via My Service Canada Account).

Step 4: Report your school attendance on every biweekly EI claimant report. Describe course hours, schedule, and confirm you are still available for work.

Never:

  • Enrol in school without informing Service Canada
  • Omit course attendance from biweekly reports
  • Assume online = automatically fine

Returning to school vs. upgrading skills: a practical distinction

Returning to school full-time for a new career (e.g., going back for a nursing degree after a layoff) → Apply for Part II Skills Development funding first; this is what the program is designed for.

Taking one evening upgrading course (e.g., Excel certification, first-aid recertification) → Declare it on reports; it is unlikely to affect EI as long as you are available for full-time work.

Attending a union-arranged training period during a temporary layoff → Generally approved; ensure your employer and union have notified Service Canada as part of the layoff arrangement.


Funding available for self-initiated school: EI Part II

If you want to return to school but do not qualify for a Service Canada training referral, you may still access funding through provincial Labour Market Development Agreement (LMDA) programs. These are co-funded by Employment Insurance but administered by provinces:

ProvinceProgram nameWhat it may fund
OntarioEmployment Ontario — Second CareerRetraining tuition for laid-off workers
British ColumbiaWorkBC Customized EmploymentSkills training, certification
AlbertaCanada-Alberta Job GrantUp to $10,000 in tuition matching
QuebecServices Québec — Mesures d’aide à l’emploiTraining plans for unemployed workers
Federal fallbackService Canada ESDC programsWhere province has no own program

These programs do not require you to be on active EI to apply — they are available to people who were recently employed and are now unemployed (or facing layoff). Apply through your provincial employment services office before your EI claim ends.