Short Answer
Yes, but not automatically. If you quit, Service Canada reviews your reason under the just cause standard. Without it, your claim is disqualified under Section 30 of the Employment Insurance Act.
What “Just Cause” Actually Means
Under the EI Act, just cause exists when a claimant had no reasonable alternative to leaving. The review asks two questions:
- Was the reason serious enough to justify leaving?
- Did you exhaust all reasonable options to fix it before quitting?
If the answer to either question is no, Service Canada will likely deny regular benefits.
Just Cause Categories Under EI Law
Section 29 and 30 of the Employment Insurance Act list recognized just cause grounds:
| Just Cause Ground | Example |
|---|---|
| Sexual or other harassment | Documented complaints ignored by employer |
| Obligation to care for a child or family member | No alternative care available |
| Reasonable assurance of other employment | New job fell through before start date |
| Significant change in work duties | Demotion without consent |
| Unsafe working conditions | Documented hazards, WSIB complaints ignored |
| Employer practices against the law | Not being paid correctly |
| Discrimination based on a prohibited ground | Age, race, disability, religion |
| Major pay reduction | Pay cut not agreed to |
| Employer relocated, creating undue hardship | A move of several hundred kilometres |
| Pressure to leave | Employer creating conditions designed to force resignation |
Note: Personal reasons such as low morale, wanting a change, or general dissatisfaction do not typically qualify.
Insurable Hours Threshold by Region
Even with just cause, you must have accumulated enough insurable hours in the 52-week qualifying period:
| Regional unemployment rate | Hours required (regular EI) |
|---|---|
| 6% or less | 700 hours |
| 6.1% – 7% | 665 hours |
| 7.1% – 8% | 630 hours |
| 8.1% – 9% | 595 hours |
| 9.1% – 10% | 560 hours |
| 10.1% – 11% | 525 hours |
| 11.1% – 12% | 490 hours |
| 12.1% – 13% | 455 hours |
| Over 13% | 420 hours |
New entrants or re-entrants to the workforce (less than 490 insurable hours in the past year or few years) generally need 910 hours regardless of region.
What to Document Before You Leave
The single most common reason just cause claims fail is that claimants quit without creating a paper trail. Start documenting before your last day:
- Incidents: Date, time, who was present, exact words or actions.
- Complaints made: Emails to HR or management, escalation attempts.
- Employer responses: Especially if none were given or the situation worsened.
- Medical notes: If health was impacted, a doctor’s note that references your workplace is critical.
- Contract evidence: Original employment contract plus any changed terms.
- Pay stubs: Before and after any pay or hours reduction.
Keep copies of everything. Digital backups are ideal since you may lose access to work systems on your last day.
Reasons That Are Often Denied
| Reason for quitting | Likely EI outcome |
|---|---|
| Found a better job (new job cancelled) | May qualify as “reasonable assurance” |
| New job pays more (plain job hopping) | Typically denied |
| Didn’t like the job / work culture | Typically denied |
| Couldn’t get a schedule change | Denied unless religious/medical obligation |
| Wanted to go back to school | Usually denied unless substantial upgrading required |
| Conflict with co-workers | Usually denied unless harassment complaints were filed |
| Spouse relocated, you followed | May qualify if you have evidence of the move |
How to Apply After Quitting
- Apply online at Canada.ca/ei as soon as your last day occurs. Delays reduce benefit weeks.
- When asked why you left, select “Quit” and explain just cause in the text box in detail.
- Upload any supporting documents you have (you can add them later too).
- Respond promptly to any Service Canada interview requests — this is where many claims are won or lost.
- Continue filing bi-weekly reports immediately even if a decision is pending.
Maximum EI Benefit in 2025
EI pays 55% of your average insurable weekly earnings, up to the annual maximum insurable earnings of $65,700 (2025). That works out to a maximum benefit of $695 per week.
If you earned $52,000 per year ($1,000/week), your EI benefit would be approximately $550 per week before tax.
If Your Claim Is Denied
| Step | What to do | Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Read the denial letter carefully | It explains the specific reason | Immediately |
| 2. Request reconsideration | Submit new evidence with your request | 30 days from denial |
| 3. Appeal to Social Security Tribunal (General Division) | If reconsideration fails | 30 days from reconsideration decision |
| 4. Further appeal to Social Security Tribunal (Appeal Division) | On question of law only | 30 days from General Division decision |
A reconsideration request works best when you submit new evidence — not just disagreement. A statement from a co-worker, a dated journal entry, or a medical note that was not in the original file can change the outcome.
Bottom Line
You can receive EI after quitting, but only if Service Canada accepts just cause under the EI Act. Document everything before you leave, apply immediately after your last day, and respond to all Service Canada contact. The quality of your evidence often matters more than the reason itself.