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What is 🇨🇦 Canada EI (Employment Insurance) Calculator?

A 🇨🇦 Canada EI (Employment Insurance) Calculator computes 🇨🇦 canada ei (employment insurance) from the inputs you provide. It applies the standard formula to the values you enter and returns the result instantly, without sending any data to a server. Maternity/parental: 55% standard, 33% extended.

Interactive calculator

Canada EI premium calculator

Employment Insurance premium for employees, 2024 federal rate.

Insurable earnings (capped at 63,200)-
Annual EI premium-
Per pay period (26 biweekly)-
Maximum premium (2024)-
How is this calculated?

2024 federal EI rate: 1.66% on insurable earnings to the maximum insurable amount of 63,200 CAD. Maximum employee premium: 1,049.12 CAD. Quebec EI rate (1.32%) is lower because QPIP is separate.

Source: Service Canada, EI premium rates 2024.

🇨🇦 Canada EI (Employment Insurance) Calculator

EI regular benefits: 55% of insurable earnings up to C$1/week max. Maternity/parental: 55% standard, 33% extended. 14-45 weeks regular based on hours worked.

About this tool

Employment Insurance (EI) provides temporary income when you lose work, take parental leave, or are sick. Regular benefits replace 55% of your weekly insurable earnings (up to C$1/week in 2025) for 14-45 weeks. Maternity/parental and sickness benefits have separate rules.

How it works

  1. Step 1

    Apply at Service Canada online within 4 weeks of last day worked.

  2. Step 2

    Need 420-700 insurable hours in the last 52 weeks (varies by region).

  3. Step 3

    2-week waiting period before first payment.

  4. Step 4

    Report bi-weekly. Up to C$1/week or 90% of weekly earnings can be earned without reduction.

Frequently asked questions

Can I get EI if I quit?

Generally no - voluntary leaving disqualifies. Exceptions: harassment, dangerous workplace, change of shift requiring you to relocate, follow spouse for new job.

Do I pay tax on EI?

Yes - EI is taxable income. CRA withholds 10% federal tax automatically. Plan to owe additional tax in April depending on your bracket.

What's the difference between standard and extended parental?

Standard: 55% of earnings for 35 weeks. Extended: 33% of earnings for 61 weeks. Extended is lower per week but more total weeks.

Can I work part-time on EI?

Yes - up to 50% of weekly EI rate is exempt; earnings above that reduce EI dollar-for-dollar.

Is the Canada EI (Employment Insurance) Calculator accurate?

The Canada EI (Employment Insurance) Calculator applies the standard formula for canada ei (employment insurance). Accuracy is limited only by your input precision. For decisions with material consequences, use the result as a starting point and verify with a qualified professional or the relevant official source.

Is the Canada EI (Employment Insurance) Calculator free?

Yes. 100% free, no signup, no payment, no API key. The site is funded by display ads that appear around the tool but not inside the calculation flow.

Are my inputs saved?

No. Inputs stay in your browser tab. Closing the tab discards them. The site uses Google Analytics for traffic measurement (anonymized) but does not see what you type into the form.

Can I use the Canada EI (Employment Insurance) Calculator on my phone?

Yes. The tool is responsive and tested on iOS Safari, Android Chrome, and major desktop browsers. Touch targets meet Apple's 44pt and Google's 48dp minimum guidance.

How do I report a bug or suggest improvement to the Canada EI (Employment Insurance) Calculator?

Email hi@3tej.com with the URL of this page and a description of what you saw vs expected. We typically respond within 72 hours and update calculators when rules or formulas change.

How accurate is the Canada EI (Employment Insurance) Calculator?

It applies the standard formula. Accuracy is limited only by your input precision. For decisions with material consequences (taxes, medical, legal, structural), use the result as a starting point and verify with a qualified professional in the relevant field.

Is the Canada EI (Employment Insurance) Calculator free to use?

Yes. 100% free, no signup, no payment, no API key. The site is funded by display ads around the tool but not inside the calculation flow.

Are my inputs saved anywhere?

No. All inputs stay in your browser tab. Closing the tab discards them. The site uses Google Analytics for traffic measurement (anonymized) but the analytics never see what you type into the form.

Does the Canada EI (Employment Insurance) Calculator work offline?

Yes. Once the page has loaded, it works without internet. The calculation runs in JavaScript on your device.

Can I share results from the Canada EI (Employment Insurance) Calculator?

Take a screenshot or copy the output. The page doesn't generate shareable URLs for specific calculations - inputs stay in your browser only.

Why are the results different from another canada ei (employment insurance) tool?

Most likely: different formula assumptions, different default values, different rounding rules, or different applicable rates. Check the methodology if both tools document it. Both can be valid for different scenarios.

How to use the Canada EI (Employment Insurance) Calculator

The Canada EI (Employment Insurance) Calculator is a browser-based tool that runs entirely on your device. Inputs you enter never reach a server - all calculations happen client-side in JavaScript. This means:

  • Privacy: nothing is logged, sent, or stored by 3Tej. Inputs disappear when you close the tab.
  • Speed: results update as you type. No network round trip.
  • Offline use: once the page is cached, it works without internet.
  • No signup: no account, no email, no rate limits.

Step by step

  1. Enter your inputs in the form above. Each field is labeled with its unit (currency, percent, kg, etc.) and the expected range.
  2. Read the result as it updates. The number reflects the formula commonly accepted in Canada EI (Employment Insurance)-related calculations.
  3. Adjust to see sensitivity: change one input at a time and watch how the output moves. This is the fastest way to understand which variable matters most.
  4. Copy or screenshot the result for later reference. The page state persists for the session if your browser allows it.

When you would use this

  • Quick estimates: when you need a number now and don't want to open a spreadsheet.
  • Sensitivity analysis: testing how a result changes as inputs vary, before committing to a real-world decision.
  • Comparison: running the same calculation with different inputs to compare options side by side.
  • Learning: building intuition for how the underlying math behaves.
  • Documentation: capturing a snapshot of inputs and outputs at a point in time.

Real-world scenarios where the Canada EI (Employment Insurance) Calculator helps

Day-to-day decisions

Quick estimates without opening a spreadsheet. The Canada EI (Employment Insurance) Calculator runs the math instantly so you can compare options, sanity-check assumptions, and move on.

Planning ahead

Build a forward-looking model. Change one variable at a time to see how sensitive the canada ei (employment insurance) output is to each input. The variable that moves the result most is where you should focus your real-world attention.

Cross-checking advisors

Compare what a professional or quoted source tells you against an independent calculation. Discrepancies are conversations worth having before signing.

Documentation

Capture inputs and outputs at a point in time. Screenshot the result with the date for audit trails, joint decisions, or future reference.

Learning intuition

By varying inputs, you build a sense of how canada ei (employment insurance) actually behaves. The numerical pattern teaches faster than reading prose.

Sensitivity analysis

Identify which input drives the result. The most-impactful variable is where small improvements pay off most.

Comparing alternatives

Run the same canada ei (employment insurance) calculation across multiple options and rank them by the dimension you care about (cost, return, speed, risk).

Pre-meeting preparation

Walk into a negotiation, sales call, or strategic discussion with the canada ei (employment insurance) numbers already in your head. Beats winging it from memory.

What the Canada EI (Employment Insurance) Calculator does and does not handle

What it does

  • Applies the standard formula widely accepted in canada ei (employment insurance)-related calculations.
  • Updates instantly as you adjust inputs - useful for sensitivity analysis and what-if scenarios.
  • Runs entirely in your browser using JavaScript. Your inputs never reach a server.
  • Handles common edge cases (zero values, very large numbers, negative inputs where applicable) with sensible defaults or validation messages.
  • Works offline once the page is cached. No internet needed for repeat calculations.
  • Free, unlimited use. No signup, no rate limits, no paywall.

What it does not handle (and where to go)

  • Personal financial advice - the calculation gives you a number, not a recommendation. Speak to a qualified advisor for decisions with significant financial consequences.
  • Country-specific rules where local variation is high - the tool uses the most common methodology; some jurisdictions have variations.
  • Real-time market data when applicable - most calculations use static reference values. Live market prices are out of scope.
  • Auto-filling from external accounts - all inputs are manual. Browser autofill works for repeated entries.
  • Saving results across devices - all state lives in this browser session.

Common mistakes and pitfalls

  • Using rough estimates as inputs. Garbage in, garbage out. The Canada EI (Employment Insurance) Calculator is only as accurate as what you type. Look up exact numbers from your statement, contract, or source document.
  • Confusing units. Most fields are labeled (currency, percent, kg, etc.) but read the label before typing. A monthly figure entered into an annual field will be off by 12x.
  • Ignoring the assumptions baked into the formula. Every calculator has assumptions (e.g., uniform growth rate, no fees, no taxes). Read the methodology section to understand what's included and what's not.
  • Comparing without holding other variables constant. When testing options, change only ONE input at a time. Changing multiple inputs makes it impossible to tell which one drove the result.
  • Treating the result as final. The output is a model. The real world adds fees, taxes, timing differences, and exceptions. Use the result as a starting point, not a final answer.
  • Misreading rounded display. Most fields display 2 decimal places but compute at full precision. Two inputs that look identical may produce slightly different outputs.

Best practices for accurate results

  • Pull exact values from authoritative sources (bank statement, payslip, official rate table, contract) rather than ballparking from memory.
  • Match units carefully. Watch for monthly vs annual, gross vs net, percent vs basis points, USD vs INR.
  • Run the calculation multiple times with slightly different inputs to see how sensitive the result is.
  • Screenshot or note the inputs alongside the output for future reference - results change if rules or rates change.
  • Cross-check against a professional source (advisor, accountant, official tool) for any decision with material impact.
  • Update annually. Tax rates, contribution limits, and benefit thresholds change yearly. Rerun key calculations every January.