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EI Contribution Rates 2026 Canada | Premiums & Maximum

Updated

EI premiums are mandatory payroll deductions that fund Canada’s Employment Insurance program — the safety net that pays benefits when you lose your job, get sick, or take parental leave. Both employees and employers contribute every pay period. The rates and maximums are set annually by the EI Commission and apply to all insurable employment across Canada (with a reduced rate in Quebec, which runs its own parental plan).

For 2026, the employee rate fell slightly from $1.64 to $1.63 per $100, while the Maximum Insurable Earnings ceiling rose from $65,700 to $68,900 — meaning the annual maximum premium is a bit higher than last year despite the lower rate.

EI Contribution Rates 2026

Key numbers

Detail2026 Amount
Maximum insurable earnings (MIE)$68,900
Employee premium rate$1.63 per $100 of insurable earnings (1.63%)
Maximum annual employee premium$1,123.07
Employer premium rate$2.282 per $100 (1.4× employee rate)
Maximum annual employer premium$1,572.30

How EI premiums are calculated

The formula is simple:

Annual EI premium = insurable earnings × rate ÷ 100

Insurable earnings cap at the MIE ($68,900), so anything above that is excluded. Here is the calculation for a $55,000 salary:

  • Annual EI: $55,000 × 1.63 ÷ 100 = $896.50
  • Bi-weekly deduction (26 pays/year): $34.48
  • Semi-monthly deduction (24 pays/year): $37.35

Your employer deducts based on each pay period’s earnings. Once your cumulative deductions hit the $1,123.07 annual maximum, the employer stops automatically — no action required on your part. Your salary calculator can show the exact EI line on a simulated paycheque.

Employee EI premiums by income level (2026)

Annual insurable earningsAnnual EI deductionMonthly deduction
$20,000$326.00$27.17
$30,000$489.00$40.75
$40,000$652.00$54.33
$50,000$815.00$67.92
$60,000$978.00$81.50
$68,900 (max)$1,123.07$93.59
$100,000+$1,123.07 (capped)$93.59

Earnings above $68,900 are not insurable — no EI premiums are deducted on amounts above the MIE ceiling. Once you hit the annual maximum, deductions stop for the rest of the year (your paycheque slightly increases).

When do EI deductions stop for the year?

For employees earning more than the $68,900 MIE ceiling, EI deductions stop mid-year once the $1,123.07 maximum is reached. The table below shows the approximate final pay period for bi-weekly payroll:

Annual salaryApproximate last EI deduction (bi-weekly pay)
$68,900Late December (deducted all year)
$80,000Early November
$100,000Mid-September
$120,000Late July
$150,000Mid-June
$200,000+Early May

The exact date shifts slightly depending on your pay schedule start date. Your employer’s payroll system tracks the running total and stops deductions automatically — you will simply notice the EI line disappear from your paycheque for the remainder of the year.

Employer EI premiums

Employers pay 1.4 times the employee premium rate. This ratio reflects the EI system design: for every dollar an employee contributes, the employer contributes $1.40.

DetailAmount
Employer rate$2.282 per $100 of insurable earnings
Maximum annual employer premium per employee$1,572.30
Small business EI Premium ReductionAvailable if employer has approved wage-loss plan

Quebec EI rates (reduced rate for QPIP)

Quebec employees pay a reduced federal EI rate because Quebec operates its own Quebec Parental Insurance Plan (QPIP), which covers maternity and parental benefits separately:

DetailOutside QuebecQuebec
Employee rate$1.63 / $100$1.30 / $100
Employer rate$2.282 / $100$1.820 / $100
Max employee premium$1,123.07$895.70
Max employer premium$1,572.30$1,253.98

Quebec employees also pay QPIP premiums separately. See Revenu Québec for current QPIP premium rates.

How MIE affects your EI benefit entitlement

Your potential EI benefit is directly tied to your Maximum Insurable Earnings. The weekly EI benefit = 55% of your average insurable weekly earnings (up to the maximum):

This ceiling means that even if you earn $150,000/year, your EI benefit is calculated only on the first $68,900 of insurable earnings. See how much EI you can receive and the full EI eligibility guide for benefit amounts and eligibility hour requirements.

EI premium tax credit

EI premiums are not tax-deductible (they do not reduce your taxable income), but they do qualify for a non-refundable federal tax credit at the 15% rate. This credit appears automatically on Schedule 1 of your T1 return and reduces the federal income tax you owe:

The credit is non-refundable — it can reduce your tax to zero but cannot generate a refund on its own. Most provinces offer an equivalent provincial credit at their lowest provincial rate.

Self-employed EI contributions

Self-employed Canadians can voluntarily opt in to EI special benefits — covering sickness, maternity, parental, and caregiving claims, but not regular (layoff) benefits:

DetailAmount
Premium rate (if opted in)Same as employee rate: $1.63/$100
Employer portionNot required — self-employed pay only the employee share
Maximum annual premium$1,123.07
Benefits availableEI Sickness, Maternity, Parental, Caregiving
Benefits NOT availableRegular EI (layoffs do not apply to self-employed)

See the self-employed EI guide for registration details and waiting period rules.

EI premium rate history

YearEmployee rateMIEMax employee premium
2020$1.58$54,200$856.36
2021$1.58$56,300$889.54
2022$1.58$60,300$952.74
2023$1.63$61,500$1,002.45
2024$1.66$63,200$1,049.12
2025$1.64$65,700$1,077.48
2026$1.63$68,900$1,123.07

Rates are set annually by the EI Commission based on the break-even rate needed to fund projected benefits. Rates have been relatively stable since the COVID-period increases. For historical CPP contribution rates over the same period, see CPP contribution rates.

What happens if you overpay EI premiums

Overpayment occurs if:

  • You changed employers mid-year and both employers deducted EI premiums, collectively exceeding the annual maximum
  • You worked in both Quebec and another province in the same year

CRA automatically calculates and refunds any employee EI overpayment as part of your tax return. You do not need to claim it separately — it reduces your balance owing or increases your refund. This is one reason why understanding your paycheque deductions throughout the year can help you anticipate your tax refund at filing time.

EI Premium Reduction program for employers

Employers who offer a group wage-loss replacement plan (short-term disability) to their employees may qualify for the EI Premium Reduction. If approved, the employer pays a reduced premium rate that is less than the standard 1.4× the employee rate (for example, 1.24×). The reduced rate only applies to employees covered by the plan — employers need a separate payroll deduction account for employees not covered by the plan.

The reduction must be approved by ESDC through the Employer Premium Reduction program.