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Maximum EI Payment Canada 2026 | How Much Can You Get?

Updated

Employment Insurance pays up to $795/week in 2026 — but the exact amount you receive depends on your earnings history and your region. Here is everything you need to know about the maximum and how the benefit is calculated.

2026 EI Maximum Benefit at a Glance

Figure Amount
Maximum insurable earnings (MIE) $65,700/year
Benefit rate 55%
Maximum weekly EI benefit $795/week
Maximum bi-weekly payment $1,590
Maximum monthly (approx.) ~$3,445

How EI Is Calculated (Step by Step)

EI is not simply 55% of your last paycheque — it uses an averaging process.

Step 1: Determine the Divisor

Your benefit is calculated based on your best weeks of earnings. The divisor (number of weeks used in the average) depends on your region’s unemployment rate:

Regional Unemployment Rate Divisor (Weeks in Average)
6% and under 22 weeks
6.1%–7% 21 weeks
7.1%–8% 20 weeks
8.1%–9% 19 weeks
9.1%–10% 18 weeks
10.1%–11% 17 weeks
11.1%–12% 16 weeks
12.1%–13% 15 weeks
Over 13% 14 weeks

Regions with higher unemployment use fewer weeks in the average — which helps workers in economically weaker areas.

Step 2: Calculate Your Average Weekly Insurable Earnings

Take your highest-earning weeks (equal to the divisor) from the past 52 weeks and divide by the divisor.

Example (region with 8% unemployment, divisor = 19 weeks):

  • Your best 19 weeks of earnings total $38,000
  • Average weekly insurable earnings = $38,000 ÷ 19 = $2,000/week

Step 3: Apply the 55% Rate

$2,000 × 55% = $1,100/week

But since the maximum is $795/week, your benefit is capped at $795.

Step 4: Apply the Low-Income Supplement (if applicable)

If your net family income is under $26,886 and you have children, your rate increases to as high as 80% of weekly earnings.

EI Benefit Estimates by Salary

Annual Salary Weekly Earnings EI Benefit (55%)
$30,000 $577 $317/week
$40,000 $769 $423/week
$50,000 $962 $529/week
$55,000 $1,058 $582/week
$60,000 $1,154 $635/week
$65,700+ $1,263+ $795/week (max)

2026 EI Contribution Rates

Figure Employee Employer
Premium rate per $100 of insurable earnings $1.64 $2.30 (1.4× employee)
Maximum annual contribution $1,077.48 $1,508.47
Maximum insurable earnings $65,700

EI premiums apply to every dollar of insurable earnings up to the $65,700 maximum. Earnings above this are EI-premium-free.

How Long Does EI Last?

The number of weeks of benefits depends on your region and insurable hours worked:

Hours Worked in Past 52 Weeks Benefit Weeks (at 6% unemployment) Benefit Weeks (at 13%+ unemployment)
420–454 Not eligible at 6% (need 700) 14 weeks
700+ 14 weeks 35–45 weeks
840+ 17–20 weeks 40–45 weeks
1,820+ 36–40 weeks 45 weeks

Maximum weeks available: 45 weeks (in high-unemployment regions with many hours worked).

Types of EI Benefits and Their Maximums

EI Benefit Type Weekly Maximum Maximum Duration
Regular (job loss) $795/week 14–45 weeks
Sickness $795/week 26 weeks
Maternity $795/week 15 weeks
Parental (standard) $795/week 35 weeks
Parental (extended) $477/week (33%) 61 weeks
Compassionate care $795/week 26 weeks
Family caregiver — adult $795/week 15 weeks
Family caregiver — child $795/week 35 weeks

The 1-Week Waiting Period

All EI claims include a 1-week waiting period — the first week of your claim is unpaid. This applies once per claim period. You must still submit your claimant report for the waiting period week.

EI While Working (Earnings Allowance)

If you find part-time work while on EI, you keep 50 cents of EI for every dollar earned — up to 90% of your previous weekly insurable earnings. Beyond that threshold, EI is reduced dollar-for-dollar.

Weekly Earnings While on EI Impact on Benefit
Under 90% of prior weekly earnings Keep $0.50 of EI per $1 earned
Over 90% of prior weekly earnings $1 reduction per $1 earned