Minimum Wage
Print Version
![PDF](/web/20061115000516im_/http://www.labour.gov.on.ca/images/icon_pdf.gif)
ISSN 1192-4683
This fact sheet is provided for your information and convenience only. It is not a legal document. For further details, consult the fact sheets. For complete information, refer to the regulations.
Before you read this document, please read our General Information fact sheet and find out if the ESA applies to you.
Qualifying for Minimum Wage
What is minimum wage?
Minimum wage is the lowest rate an employer can pay an employee. Most employees are eligible for minimum wage, whether they are full-time, part-time, casual employees, or are paid an hourly rate, commission, piece rate, flat rate or salary.
Who is entitled to minimum wage?
Most employees are entitled to at least minimum wage.
There are exceptions to the ESA 's usual rules for certain industries and job categories. Please refer to the chart in the "How Are You Covered by the ESA?" fact sheet for details about industry-specific and job-specific exemptions, and special rules regarding minimum wage.
Does everyone get the same amount of minimum wage per hour?
No. There is a general minimum wage that applies to most employees. But there are other minimum wages that apply to:
- employees who regularly serve liquor directly to customers or guests in licensed premises
- students under 18 years of age who work during school breaks or summer holidays, or who work 28 hours a week or less when school is in session
- homeworkers
- hunting and fishing guides.
Rights and Responsibilities
What are the current minimum wages for different jobs?
General minimum wage
This rate applies to most employees.
Student wage
This rate applies to students under 18 years of age who work 28 hours a week or less when school is in session, or students employed during a school break or summer holidays.
Liquor servers wage
This hourly rate applies to employees who serve liquor directly to customers or guests in licensed premises as a regular part of their work. Licensed premises are businesses for which a license or permit has been issued under the Liquor License Act.
Hunting and fishing guides wage
The minimum wage for hunting and fishing guides is not an hourly rate. They get a minimum amount for working less than five consecutive hours in a day, and a different amount for working five hours or more in a day--whether or not the hours are consecutive.
Homeworkers wage
Homeworkers are employees who do paid work in their own homes. For example, they may sew clothes for a clothing manufacturer, answer telephone calls for a call centre, or write software for a high-tech company. Note that students of any age (including students under the age of 18 years) who are employed as homeworkers must be paid the homeworker's minimum wage.
The minimum wage rates in each of the above categories and scheduled annual increases are set out below:
Minimum Wage Rate | January 1995 | February 1, 2004 | February 1, 2005 | February 1, 2006 | February 1, 2007 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
General Minimum Wage | $6.85 per hour | $7.15 per hour |
$7.45 per hour |
$7.75 per hour |
$8.00 per hour |
Student Minimum Wage | $6.40 per hour | $6.70 per hour |
$6.95 per hour |
$7.25 per hour |
$7.50 per hour |
Liquor Servers Minimum Wage | $5.95 per hour | $6.20 per hour |
$6.50 per hour | $6.75 per hour |
$6.95 per hour |
Hunting and Fishing Guides Minimum Wage | $34.25: rate for working less than five consecutive hours in a day; |
$35.75
$71.50 |
$37.25
$74.50 |
$38.75
$77.50 |
$40 .00
$80.00 |
Homeworkers Wage | $7.54 per hour (110 per cent of the general minimum wage) |
$7.87 per hour (110 per cent of the general minimum wage) |
$8.20 per hour (110 per cent of the general minimum wage) |
$8.53 per hour (110 per cent of the general minimum wage) |
$8.80 per hour (110 per cent of the general minimum wage) |
How is minimum wage calculated for employees who earn commission?
If an employee's pay is based completely or partly on commission, it must amount to at least the minimum wage for each hour the employee has worked.
To ensure an employee is receiving the minimum wage, the total amount the employee earned in regular wages over a work week is divided by the number of hours the employee worked in that week. Here's an example. (Note: where overtime hours are worked, the calculation is more complicated.)
A typical case: calculating pay
Luba earned $150, working 25 hours during her work week in March 2006:
- $150 ÷25 = $6
The minimum wage is $7.75 an hour, then 25 hours at $7.75 is $193.75. Therefore, Luba is owed the difference between her commission pay ($150) and what her employer would have paid for the same number of hours at the minimum wage ($193.75):
- $193.75 - $150 = $43.75
Luba's employer owes her $43.75
Can an employer take into account the provision of room and meals to an employee when calculating minimum wage?
Yes, but there are limits. Room and board (meals) shall not be deemed to have been paid as wages unless the employee has received the meals and occupied the room.
What employers can deduct for room and board
The amounts that an employer is deemed to have paid to the employee as wages for room or board or both is set out below:
- Room (weekly)
- private $31.70
- non-private $15.85
- non-private (domestic workers only) $0.00
- Meals
- each meal $2.55
- weekly maximum $53.55
- Rooms and meals (weekly)
- with private room $85.25
- with non-private $69.40
- non-private (domestic workers only) $53.55
- Harvest workers (only) weekly housing
- serviced housing $99.35
- unserviced housing $73.30
If an employee is paid more than the minimum wage, the amount that room and board can be deemed as wages paid to an employee can also increase. However, an employer must have a written authorization from the employee in order that a higher amount can be deemed paid as wages. In this case, the wages-after wages have been deemed paid for the provision of room and board but before any deductions are made-must be equal to or greater than the minimum wage less the maximum amounts set out above that can be deemed as wages for room and board.
Can employers make deductions from an employee's wages?
Yes, but only certain kinds of deductions can be made:
- Statutory Deductions
Federal and provincial statutes sometimes require an employer to withhold or make deductions from an employee's wages. For example, employers are required to make deductions for income taxes, employment insurance premiums and Canada Pension Plan contributions. An employer isn't permitted to deduct more than the law says and cannot legally make deductions if the money isn't then forwarded to the proper authority.
- Court Order
A court may order an employer to make a deduction from an employee's wages if the employee owes money either to the employer, or to someone else.
- Written Authorization
An employer may also deduct money from an employee's wages with the employee's written authorization. An oral authorization is not enough. The employee's written authorization must state:
- that a deduction from wages is allowed
- the amount of money to be deducted-or it must provide a method of calculating the specific amount of money to be deducted.
Even with a written authorization, an employer cannot withhold, deduct or require wages to be returned:
- because of the employee's faulty work
- because the employer had a cash shortage or property lost or stolen, if the employee wasn't the only person who had access to the cash or property.
What happens if an employee comes in to work his or her shift, but is sent home after working less than three hours?
When an employee is required to report to work, but works less than three hours, he or she must be paid whichever of the following amounts is the highest:
- three hours at the minimum wage, or
- the employee's regular wage for the time worked.
For example, if an employee is paid $10.00 an hour and works only two hours, he or she is entitled to three hours at minimum wage (e.g., $7.15 x 3 = $21.45)-instead of two hours at his or her regular wage (10.00 x 2 = $20.00).
This is called the "three-hour rule."
The rule does not apply to:
- students (including students over 18 years of age)
- employees whose regular shift is three hours or less
- where the cause of the employee not being able to work at least three hours was beyond the employer's control.
Special rules may apply to certain industries. Please refer to the ESA and regulations.
What happens when the minimum wage changes?
Beginning February 1, 2005, if the minimum wage rate changes during a pay period, the pay period will be treated as if it were two separate pay periods and the employee will be entitled to at least the minimum wage that applies in each of those periods.
What if the employer does not follow the ESA?
If an employee thinks the employer is not complying with the ESA, he or she can call the Employment Standards Information Centre at 416-326-7160 or toll free at 1-800-531-5551 for more information about the ESA and how to file a complaint. Complaints are investigated by an employment standards officer who can, if necessary, make orders against an employer—including an order to comply with the ESA. The ministry has a number of other options to enforce the ESA, including requesting voluntary compliance, issuing an order to pay wages, an order to reinstate and/or compensate, a notice of contravention, or issuing a ticket or otherwise prosecuting the employer under the Provincial Offences Act.