What insurable employment means in Canadian payroll and why this status matters for EI premiums, insurable hours, and ROE reporting.
Insurable employment is employment that counts for Employment Insurance purposes in the Canadian payroll system.
In plain payroll language, this is the status question behind whether EI premiums and EI-related reporting concepts such as insurable hours and insurable earnings belong in the payroll file.
Insurable employment matters because it affects:
This status question helps explain why not every paid work arrangement is treated the same way for EI purposes.
In Canadian payroll, when employment is insurable, payroll generally treats the worker under the ordinary EI premium and reporting framework. The CRA can also make rulings about whether employment is insurable, which is especially important in unusual cases such as certain related-party or ownership situations.
That means insurable employment is closely connected to:
A worker is treated as an employee and the employment is insurable. Payroll deducts EI premiums, tracks insurable earnings and hours, and later uses those records if an ROE or other EI-related reporting step becomes necessary.
Some employment relationships have exceptions or require a ruling to confirm insurable status. This page explains the payroll concept of insurable employment, not a live determination for a disputed case.