Employment and labor laws vary from country to country. This guide is intended to provide the most up to date information available. We will update this guide as needed when changes are made to the laws.
Employment Contracts
Employers are legally required to provide formal written contracts for all employees that include salary/wage, termination terms, job title, etc. The contracts must be written in English and use the Canadian Dollar currency (CAD).
Working Hours
Per the Employment Standards Labor Code, § 16, the maximum number of working hours shall not exceed 8 hours a day, 44 hours a week, with a maximum (inclusive of overtime) of 12-hours in a day. However, in Quebec this can differ per industry, for example:
- Clothing industry- 39 hours maximum per week
- Forestry or sawmill- 47 hours maximum per week
- Remote area or James Bay Territory- 55 hours maximum per week
- Security + provides surveillance- 44 hours maximum per week
- Security + doesn’t provide surveillance- 60 hours maximum per week
Overtime
An employer must pay an employee overtime pay for overtime hours at an overtime rate that is at least 150.00% of the employee’s regular rate of pay or one hour of time off in lieu.
Certain job types are exempt from overtime rules, for example, many managerial and IT positions.
Public Holidays
There are 8 national holidays in Quebec. If a holiday falls on a weekend, the holiday is observed on the Friday before the weekend or on the following Monday.
For the year 2022:
- Jan 1: New Year’s Day
- Jan 2: New Year’s Day Holiday (Clothing industry)
- Mar 29: Good Friday (Employers decide Monday or Friday)
- Apr 1: Easter Monday (Employers decide Monday or Friday)
- May 20: Patriot’s Day
- Jun 24: Saint-Jean-Baptiste Day
- Jul 1: Canada Day
- Sep 2: Labour Day
- Oct 14: Thanksgiving
- Dec 25: Christmas Day
Minimum Wage
As of May 1, 2023, Quebec’s current general minimum wage will increase from 14.25 CAD per hour to 15.25 CAD. For tipped workers, the minimum wage is 12.20 CAD per hour. The minimum wage rate set for employees of federally regulated organisations will be the current minimum wage rate specified in the jurisdiction in which the employee performs the work.
Annual Leave (vacation)
In Quebec, employees are entitled to two consecutive weeks of vacation leave after the first year of employment and three consecutive weeks of leave after five years of employment. However, it is common to offer leave from day 1.
Employees are entitled to vacation pay of 4.00% of the regular salary rate of pay for the first five years of employment and 6.00% of the regular salary rate of pay after five years of employment.
Sick Leave
The Canada Labour Code was updated with effect from December 1, 2022, to provide 10 days of paid sick leave to employees in the federally regulated private sector, (which is limited to specific industries) There is a thirty day qualifying period for covered employees; therefore, on December 31, employees who have been continuously employed for at least 30 days will have access to their first three days of paid sick leave. As of February 1, 2023, employees will acquire a fourth day, and will continue to accumulate one day a month up to a maximum of 10 days per year.
Effective December 18, 2022, Canada’s Employment Insurance sickness benefits were extended from 15 weeks to 26 weeks. As such, qualified individuals who establish a new claim on or after December 18, 2022 will receive up to 26 weeks of Employment Insurance sickness benefits, paid at 55% of their average weekly insurance earnings, for up to a maximum of $650 per week in 2023.
Maternity and Paternity
Maternity Leave
Employees are entitled to up to 17 weeks of leave if the employee has completed at least one year of employment before the due date. Maternity leave may not begin before the 17th week preceding the expected delivery date and shall end not later than 18 weeks after. If the delivery occurs after the expected date, the employee is entitled to at least two additional weeks of maternity leave. Special maternity leave may begin four weeks before the expected delivery date when there is a risk of termination of her pregnancy or a danger for the health of the mother or unborn child caused by the pregnancy. Two weeks’ notice and a medical certificate is required.
Employment insurance provides maternity and parental benefits to:
- People who are away from work because they’re pregnant or have recently given birth
- Parents who are away from work to care for their newborn or newly adopted child
- Workers are entitled to 55% of their earnings for 15 weeks up to a maximum of CAD650 a week
Maternity benefits are only available to the person who is away from work because they’re pregnant or have recently given birth. They can’t be shared between parents.
The person receiving maternity benefits may also be entitled to parental benefits.
Maternity benefits can be followed by parental benefits. You may apply for both at once.
Paternity Leave
Paternal leave falls under parental leave.
Parental Leave
Parents are entitled to up to 63 weeks of leave to care for a newborn or adopted child. The parental leave cannot begin before the week of birth or when the child is legally adopted.
The leave should begin no later than 78 weeks after the birth or adoption.
Employment insurance provides maternity and parental benefits to:
- People who are away from work because they’re pregnant or have recently given birth
- Parents who are away from work to care for their newborn or newly adopted child
The assistance details are as follows:
Parental Benefits
| Benefit Name | Maximum Weeks | Benefit Rate | Weekly Max |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard parental | Up to 40 weeks can be shared between parents, but one parent cannot receive more than 35 weeks of standard benefits | 55% | up to $650 |
| Extended parental | Up to 69 weeks can be shared between parents, but one parent cannot receive more than 61 weeks of extended benefits | 33% | up to $390 |
Other Leave
Employees are entitled to 5 days of mandatory leave for the bereavement of a family member, approximately 27 weeks of leave for Compassionate care leave, up to 10 days per year for personal emergency leave, and up to 8 weeks in 26 weeks for Family medical leave.
Employees are also entitled to up to 104 weeks in the event of the death of an employee’s child or in the case that the child has disappeared.
In Quebec, all employers must provide their full-time, regularly employed employees, job-protected, unpaid leave for their duty as jurors or as a witness in a case, responding to a subpoena: or acting as a plaintiff or defendant in the courts. Employees must provide a copy of the jury summons to the employer as evidence of the requirement.
Reservist Leave regulations require employers to provide up to 20 days of unpaid leave each calendar year for annual training for Reservists once they have completed at least 26 consecutive weeks of service with the same employer. An employee may take reservist leave for the following reasons:
- deployment to a Canadian forces’ operation outside Canada
- deployment to a Canadian forces operation inside Canada that is assisting with an emergency or the aftermath of an emergency
- annual training, included related travel time, for up to 20 days in a calendar year
- other operations set out as such in the Employment Standards Regulation by the Minister
Employee Severance and Terminations
Termination Process
The termination process is standard in Quebec, Canada. It is based on termination reasons within the General Labor Law, unless an employer can provide sufficient cause for dismissal without notice (due to misconduct, etc.)
Notice Period
In general, notice periods in Quebec are stipulated within the employment contract/collective agreement and is linked to the reason for termination and the employee’s length of service, as below:
- Seven days’ notice is required if the employee is within 3 months to 1 year of employment
- 14 days’ notice is required if the employee is within 1 year to 5 years of employment
- Four weeks’ notice is required if the employee is within their fifth year of service, up to the tenth year of service
- Eight weeks’ notice is required if the employee has completed more than ten years’ service.
Severance Pay
In Quebec, Canada, there is no statutory severance pay due.
Probation Period
Probation periods in Quebec for permanent employees are generally a minimum of 3 months.
Payroll Cycle
An employer has 1 month to remit an employee’s first pay. After this, wages must be paid at regular intervals of no more than 16 days, or 1 month in case of managerial personnel. If pay day falls on a statutory holiday, the wages must be paid on the preceding working day.
13th Salary
There is no legislation for 13th-month payments in Quebec, Canada.
Contributions
Employer Payroll Contributions
Employee Payroll Contributions
VISA
The Government of Canada operates the Temporary Foreign Worker Program to enable foreign citizens to apply to work in Canada for a set period. The program covers all job roles and knowledge levels, and it can be used when a qualified Canadian citizen or permanent resident is not available or suitable for the role.
Federal (Government of Canada) immigration programs and provincial programs (Government of Quebec) are available in Quebec.
VAT
The standard rate of VAT in Quebec, Canada, is 5.00%. However, Quebec also has a provincial sales tax (PST) which is a retail sales tax that applies when taxable goods or services are purchased, acquired, or brought into Quebec for use in Quebec, and this rate is 9.98%, resulting in a combined GST and QST rate of 14.98%.