What an hourly rate means in Canadian payroll and how payroll uses it to build regular and premium earnings.
An hourly rate is the amount of pay assigned to one hour of work.
In payroll terms, it is one of the main inputs used to calculate regular earnings for hourly employees. It is not the same as gross pay, and it does not explain the entire paycheque by itself.
Hourly rate matters because payroll often starts with it when calculating regular earnings.
It helps explain:
Readers often see the final pay amount and forget that payroll built it from an underlying rate and hours record.
In Canadian payroll, an hourly rate is usually multiplied by eligible hours worked in the pay period to produce straight-time earnings. Payroll may then add other lines such as overtime, shift premiums, vacation-related amounts, or corrections before arriving at gross pay.
That makes hourly rate an earnings input that sits early in the workflow:
The hourly rate is important, but it is only one step in the full payroll calculation.
An employee earns $24 per hour and works 75 regular hours in the pay period. Payroll uses the hourly rate and the hours worked to calculate the regular earnings amount, then adds any separate overtime or premium lines that apply.
Hourly-rate treatment can intersect with overtime rules, reporting-pay issues, collective agreements, and provincial or federal employment standards. This page explains the payroll concept, not every legal edge case.