
The minimum wage for employees under federal jurisdiction is the general adult minimum wage rate established in each province and territory, as revised from time to time. Each time a province or a territory raises its minimum wage rate, the federal minimum wage rate for that province or territory is raised automatically. To enquire about the current minimum wage rate applicable in your province or territory, contact the Labour Program or consult the Labour Program website.
The following questions and answers, based on Division II of Part III of the Canada Labour Code and the Canada Labour Standards Regulations will be of interest to employers and employees under federal jurisdiction. Pamphlet #1 of this series describes the types of businesses covered by the Code. It is available from any Labour Program office or consult the Labour Program website.
All employees except registered apprentices must be paid at least the minimum wage.
An employer is exempted from the application of the minimum wage for employees who are being trained on the job if the employees are registered under and paid according to a provincial apprenticeship Act.
Yes. The Canada Labour Standards Regulations state that persons under the age of 17 years may be employed provided that:
No. The rate for employees under the age of 17 is the same as for employees 17 and over. Where minimum hourly rates for a province or a territory are fixed on the basis of age, the minimum hourly rate for that province or territory is the highest of those rates.
No. The minimum rate applies to students in the same manner as to other classes of employees.
Yes. All employees whose wages are paid on a time basis other than hourly must receive at least the equivalent of the minimum wage. Where the basis of payment is other than time, the Minister of Labour may fix a rate that is equivalent to the minimum wage.
Yes. When room and/or board are provided by an employer and the arrangement is accepted by the employee, the employee's wages may be reduced below the minimum wage, but not by more than 50 cents per meal and 60 cents per day for lodging.
Yes. An employer shall pay an employee who reports for work at the call of the employer, wages for not less than three hours of work at the employee's regular rate of wages, whether or not the employee is asked to do any work after so reporting.
This pamphlet is provided for information only. For interpretation and application purposes, please refer to Part III of the Canada Labour Code (Labour Standards), the Canada Labour Standards Regulations, and relevant amendments.
The number, 1-800-641-4049, offers 24-hour bilingual information on the Directorate's programs and services and provides a single point of contact for our clients and Canadians.
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© Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada, 2010
Print
Cat. No.: HS23-2/2-2010
ISBN: 978-1-100-52085-8
PDF
Cat. No.: HS23-2/2-2010E-PDF
ISBN: 978-1-100-16469-4
Full text of Pamphlet #2 - Minimum Wages (Labour Standards) in PDF (66 KB)
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