What monthly pay means in Canadian payroll and how once-a-month payroll differs from more frequent pay schedules.
Monthly pay means payroll pays the employee once each calendar month.
In payroll terms, monthly pay is a lower-frequency schedule than weekly, biweekly, or semi-monthly pay. That difference affects how employees read their paycheque and how payroll allocates salary and deductions across the year.
Monthly pay matters because it affects:
It also matters because employees moving from a more frequent schedule often misread a monthly pay amount as if it were directly comparable to a biweekly or semi-monthly amount.
In Canadian payroll, monthly pay usually means one payroll run each month for the employee or group. Payroll still needs:
That means monthly pay is not simply “more money on one cheque.” It is a different payroll rhythm that changes how the year’s compensation is spread across runs.
An employer pays salaried staff on the last business day of each month. Payroll calculates the month’s earnings, applies deductions for that run, and issues one monthly payment instead of splitting the same annual salary into more frequent payroll cycles.
Exact pay dates, month-end processing, and business-day adjustments vary by employer and payroll system, even when the schedule is broadly monthly.