What commission means in Canadian payroll and how this variable pay term differs from salary, wages, or bonus pay.
Commission is variable compensation tied to sales, production, or another measurable performance formula rather than being fixed the way salary usually is.
In payroll context, commission matters because it still has to be processed through payroll, reflected on the pay stub, and carried into payroll deductions and reporting even though the amount may change from one period to the next.
Commission matters because it affects:
It also helps readers avoid treating all variable pay as if it were just a bonus or just another label for wages.
In Canadian payroll, commission may be paid:
Payroll still has to record the amount, include it in gross pay for the run, and process the related deductions and reporting. That means commission is a compensation method, not a payroll shortcut that bypasses ordinary payroll controls.
A sales employee receives a base salary plus monthly commission. One pay stub shows regular salary of $2,500 and commission of $900. Payroll includes both amounts in the run, applies deductions, and updates the employee’s year-to-date totals.
Commission arrangements can vary widely by employer plan, industry, payout cycle, expense treatment, and worker context. This page explains the payroll meaning of commission, not every contractual rule around how commission plans are designed.