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First Time Claiming EI in Canada 2026 | Step-by-Step Guide

Updated

Losing a job is stressful. Employment Insurance (EI) provides financial support while you look for work. This guide walks you through the entire process from eligibility to your first payment.

What Is Employment Insurance?

EI is a federal program that provides temporary income replacement if you:

  • Lose your job through no fault of your own (layoff, company closure)
  • Cannot work due to illness, injury, or quarantine
  • Are off work for pregnancy or parental leave
  • Are caring for a critically ill family member

This guide focuses on regular EI benefits for job loss.

Am I Eligible?

Basic Eligibility Requirements

Requirement Detail
Insurable employment Must have worked for an employer who deducted EI premiums
Hours requirement 420–700 insurable hours in past 52 weeks
Job separation Lost job through no fault of your own
Canada resident Must live in Canada
Available for work Able and willing to work
Actively looking Must be job searching

Regional Hours Requirements (2026)

Hours required vary by regional unemployment rate:

Regional Unemployment Rate Hours Required
6% and under 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

Can I Get EI If I Quit?

Generally no — but there are exceptions for just cause:

Situation EI Eligible?
Laid off / downsizing ✅ Yes
Contract ended ✅ Yes
Quit due to toxic/unsafe workplace ✅ Possible (must prove just cause)
Quit for personal reasons ❌ No
Fired for misconduct ❌ No

If you quit due to harassment, unsafe conditions, or significant changes to your job (pay cut, location change, duties), you may have “just cause.” Document everything.

How Much Will I Receive?

Calculating Your Benefit

EI pays 55% of your average insurable weekly earnings, up to a maximum.

Metric 2026 Amount
Maximum insurable earnings $65,700/year
Maximum weekly benefit $795/week (55% × $65,700 / 52)
Minimum weekly benefit Based on 55% of your actual earnings

Calculation Examples

Annual Salary Weekly Earnings EI Benefit (55%)
$40,000 $769 $423/week
$55,000 $1,058 $582/week
$65,700 $1,263 $695/week
$80,000+ (capped) $795/week (max)

Low-income supplement: If your net family income is under $26,886 and you have children, you may receive up to 80% of earnings (instead of 55%).

How Long Do Benefits Last?

Regional Unemployment Min Weeks Max Weeks
Under 6% 14 36
6%–7% 17 38
7%–8% 17 40
8%–9% 20 42
9%–10% 21 44
10%–13% 23 46
Over 13% 26 45

Maximum benefit period is generally 14–45 weeks depending on your region and hours worked.

Step-by-Step: How to Apply

Step 1: Get Your Record of Employment (ROE)

Your employer must issue a ROE within 5 business days of your last day. The ROE shows:

  • Your insurable hours
  • Reason for separation (must say “layoff” for regular EI)
  • Insurable earnings by pay period

If your employer delays the ROE: Apply anyway — write “ROE not yet available” and Service Canada will contact your employer.

ROEs are usually issued electronically directly to Service Canada. You may not receive a paper copy.

Step 2: Apply Online (Do It Immediately)

Apply at My Service Canada Account or call 1-800-206-7218.

Apply as soon as you stop working. You cannot claim retroactively — every week you delay is a week of benefits you may forfeit.

What You Need to Apply

Item Details
Social Insurance Number (SIN) Your tax ID
Personal information Address, banking details for direct deposit
Employment history (52 weeks) All jobs, not just most recent
ROE details Your employer’s information
Reason for leaving Be accurate — misrepresentation is fraud
Availability for work Confirm you are available

Step 3: Serve the Waiting Period

There is a 1-week waiting period (waiting period) before benefits begin. No benefits are paid for that week.

After the waiting period, create biweekly reports (every 2 weeks) to receive payment.

Step 4: Submit Biweekly Reports

You must submit a claimant report every 2 weeks to continue receiving EI. Reports ask:

  • Did you work during the period? If so, how much did you earn?
  • Did you look for work? Provide 2 job search contacts per week
  • Were you available for work?
  • Did you refuse any work?

Report income honestly. You keep $0.50 of your EI for every $1 earned (up to 90% of your previous weekly earnings). Concealing earnings is fraud.

EI While Working Part-Time

If you find part-time work, you keep receiving partial EI:

You Earn EI Reduction
Under 90% of weekly insurable earnings Keep $0.50 of EI per $1 earned
Over 90% of weekly insurable earnings EI reduced dollar for dollar

This makes it worth accepting part-time work — you still receive partial EI.

What Happens After You Apply

Timeline Action
Day 1 Apply as soon as last day of work
1–2 weeks Review of application
2–3 weeks First payment deposited (direct deposit)
Biweekly Submit claimant reports
Ongoing Keep looking for work
End of benefits Return to work or exhaust benefit period

Common Reasons EI Is Denied or Delayed

Reason What to Do
Not enough insurable hours Check exact hours — sometimes counted incorrectly
Voluntary quit Challenge if you had just cause
Dismissed for misconduct Challenge if misconduct claim is exaggerated
Waiting for ROE Apply anyway, ROE can be submitted later
Not available for work Must be genuinely available and searching
Stopped submitting reports Resume immediately

If You Are Denied

You have 30 days to request a reconsideration of the decision. If still denied, you can appeal to the Social Security Tribunal.

Services Canada makes errors — do not assume a denial is final.

Taxes on EI

EI benefits are taxable income. Service Canada withholds federal tax automatically, but provincial tax is not withheld.

Step Action
Receive T4E slip Shows total EI received and tax withheld
Report on T1 return Enter T4E amounts
May owe additional tax If provincial tax was not withheld enough
High income repayment If your annual income exceeds ~$79,000, repay 30% of benefits