Ontario Employment Standards Act, 2000: Your Rights as an Employee Explained
Ian2026-05-21T12:17:24-04:00Ontario's Employment Standards Act, 2000 sets the minimum rights and obligations that govern most workplaces in the province. It covers minimum wage, overtime, vacation pay, public holidays, leaves of absence, termination, severance, hours of work, wage deductions, and more. Whether you are dealing with a payroll dispute, a denied leave, or a termination you believe was not handled properly, the ESA is where your rights begin.
This guide explains what the ESA covers, who it applies to, what your minimum entitlements are, and where to go if your employer is not meeting their obligations. Each section links to a detailed article covering that topic in full.
Think your employer is not meeting their ESA obligations?
Employees who believe their rights under the Employment Standards Act, 2000 have been violated can file a complaint with Ontario's Ministry of Labour. Get advice before the two-year limitation period runs out.
Call: 1-800-771-7882 Speak With an Employment LawyerWhat is the Employment Standards Act, 2000?
The Employment Standards Act, 2000 is Ontario's primary legislation governing the employment relationship. It establishes the minimum standards employers must meet and the minimum entitlements employees must receive. These are floors, not ceilings. Your employment contract may provide more, but it cannot provide less. Any contractual provision that attempts to reduce your entitlements below the ESA minimum is unenforceable.
The ESA is enforced by Ontario's Ministry of Labour through a complaints process. Employees who believe their rights have been violated can file a complaint and an employment standards officer will investigate. Employers found to be in violation may be ordered to pay back wages, interest, and penalties.
Who does the ESA apply to?
The ESA applies to most employees and employers in Ontario where work is performed in the province. It covers full-time, part-time, casual, temporary, hourly, and salaried employees. However, employees in federally regulated industries including banks, airlines, telecommunications companies, and railways are covered by the federal Canada Labour Code rather than the ESA. Some occupations also have modified rules or specific exemptions under the ESA.
Minimum wage
Ontario Minimum Wage 2026: Current Rates and the October Increase
Current rates, the confirmed October 2026 increase, who qualifies, and what to do if you are being underpaid.
Read more →Minimum Age to Work in Ontario: Legal Working Age by Industry
The legal working age by workplace type, student minimum wage rules, and what rights young workers have under the ESA.
Read more →Casual Employment in Ontario: Your Rights Under the ESA
Casual workers have nearly identical ESA rights to full-time employees. Learn your entitlements for wages, overtime, vacation pay, and termination.
Read more →Hours of work and breaks
Ontario Break Laws: How Many Breaks You Are Entitled to by Shift Length
The 30-minute meal break rule, what is not required by law, and what to do if your employer is denying required breaks.
Read more →What Are Full-Time Hours in Ontario? ESA Rules on Hours of Work and Rest
The ESA maximum hours, daily and weekly rest period entitlements, overtime threshold, and what your employer cannot require.
Read more →Overtime pay
Vacation pay
Public holidays
Sick days
Wage deductions
Is your employer withholding wages, denying breaks, or failing to pay overtime?
Most ESA violations can be pursued through a Ministry of Labour complaint. You can recover back wages going up to two years. Get advice before the limitation period runs out.
File a Ministry of Labour Complaint Or call us: 1-800-771-7882Termination and severance
Terminated Without Cause in Ontario: What You Are Owed and What to Do Next
ESA minimums vs. common law notice, the three components of termination compensation, and what to do before accepting any offer.
Read more →Common Law Severance in Ontario: What It Is and How Much You May Be Owed
The difference between ESA and common law severance, the Bardal factors, typical ranges, and when termination clauses fail.
Read more →Leaves of absence
Leaves of Absence in Ontario: A Complete Guide
Overview of all ESA-protected leaves, eligibility rules, and how to request leave from your employer.
Read more →Maternity Leave in Ontario: Entitlements and How It Works
Up to 17 weeks of pregnancy leave, eligibility, notice requirements, and EI benefits during leave.
Read more →Parental Leave in Ontario: What Parents Are Entitled To
Up to 61 or 63 weeks of parental leave, who qualifies, and how parental leave interacts with EI benefits.
Read more →Paternity Leave in Ontario: Rights for New Fathers and Non-Birthing Parents
Entitlements, eligibility, and how paternity leave is taken under Ontario law.
Read more →Family Medical Leave in Ontario: What Employees Are Entitled To
Up to 28 weeks of leave to care for a seriously ill family member, eligibility, and documentation requirements.
Read more →Compassionate Care Leave in Ontario: Rights and Entitlements
Leave to provide care or support to a family member with a serious medical condition and a significant risk of death.
Read more →Long-Term Illness Leave in Ontario: Your Rights Under the ESA
Up to 27 weeks of job-protected leave for employees with a serious medical condition affecting their ability to work.
Read more →Stress Leave in Ontario: How Long It Lasts, Who Qualifies, and Your Legal Rights
ESA sick leave vs. human rights disability leave, how long stress leave can last, and what your employer must do.
Read more →Mental Health Leave in Ontario: Employee Rights and Employer Obligations
How mental health conditions are protected under the ESA and the Human Rights Code, and what accommodation looks like in practice.
Read more →Family Caregiver Leave in Ontario: Eligibility, Duration, and Your Rights
Up to 8 weeks per year per family member with a serious medical condition. Available from day one of employment with no shared pool.
Read more →Bereavement Leave in Ontario: How Many Days You Are Entitled To
ESA bereavement leave entitlements, who qualifies, and what your employer must provide when a family member dies.
Read more →Jury Duty in Ontario: Is It Mandatory and What Are Your Rights at Work?
Your ESA rights during jury duty, whether your employer can refuse to allow you to serve, and pay obligations during leave.
Read more →ESA minimum entitlements at a glance
| Entitlement | ESA minimum | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum wage | $17.60/hr (current); $17.95/hr from Oct 1, 2026 | General rate. Student and homeworker rates differ. |
| Meal breaks | 30 minutes after every 5 consecutive hours | Generally unpaid unless work is required during break |
| Overtime | 1.5x regular rate after 44 hours/week | Exemptions apply for managers, certain professionals |
| Vacation pay | 4% of gross wages (first 5 years); 6% after 5 years | Cannot be waived; must be paid out on termination |
| Public holidays | 9 statutory holidays per year | Premium pay or substitute day off if required to work |
| Sick leave | 3 unpaid days per calendar year | After 2 consecutive weeks of employment |
| Termination notice | 1 week per year of service, max 8 weeks | Common law notice often significantly higher |
| Severance pay | 1 week per year of service, max 26 weeks | Applies where 5+ years service and payroll exceeds $2.5M |
| Minimum working age | 14 years in most workplaces; higher in construction, mining, and kitchens | Set under the Occupational Health and Safety Act, not the ESA |
| Maximum weekly hours | 48 hours per week without an excess hours agreement | Cannot exceed 60 hours even with a written agreement |
| Parental leave | Up to 61 or 63 weeks job-protected leave | Depends on whether birth parent also took pregnancy leave |
| Long-term illness leave | Up to 27 weeks job-protected leave in a 52-week period | In force June 19, 2025. Requires 13 weeks of employment and medical certificate. |
| Family caregiver leave | Up to 8 weeks per year per qualifying family member | No minimum service required. Each caregiver gets their own 8 weeks. |
How to file a Ministry of Labour complaint in Ontario
If your employer is not meeting their obligations under the Employment Standards Act, 2000, you can file a complaint with Ontario's Ministry of Labour. The complaint process is free, does not require a lawyer, and can result in your employer being ordered to pay back wages, interest, and penalties. Most ESA complaints must be filed within two years of the violation.
Common situations that can be pursued through a Ministry of Labour complaint include unpaid wages, overtime not paid, vacation pay not provided, unauthorized deductions, denied sick days, and failure to provide proper termination pay. For a full explanation of the process see our guide to filing a Ministry of Labour complaint in Ontario.
Frequently asked questions about the ESA in Ontario
What does the Employment Standards Act, 2000 cover?
The Employment Standards Act, 2000 covers minimum wage, hours of work, overtime pay, vacation pay, public holidays, sick leave, leaves of absence, termination notice, severance pay, wage deductions, and equal pay. It sets the minimum standards that all Ontario employers must meet and that employees are entitled to regardless of what their contract says.
Does the ESA apply to my job?
The ESA applies to most employees who perform work in Ontario. Exceptions include employees in federally regulated industries such as banking, airlines, and telecommunications, who are covered by the federal Canada Labour Code. Some occupations have specific exemptions or modified rules under the ESA. If you are unsure whether the ESA applies to your situation, get legal advice.
Can my employment contract give me less than the ESA minimum?
No. Any contractual provision that purports to give an employee less than the ESA minimum is void to that extent. The ESA entitlement applies instead. For example, a contract that says vacation pay is 2% is unenforceable — the employee is entitled to the 4% ESA minimum regardless of what the contract says.
How do I file an ESA complaint in Ontario?
You can file a complaint through Ontario's Ministry of Labour online or by phone. The complaint is investigated by an employment standards officer who can order the employer to pay back wages and penalties. Most complaints must be filed within two years of the violation. Getting legal advice before filing helps ensure you recover everything you are owed.
Can my employer fire me for filing an ESA complaint?
No. Retaliating against an employee for asserting their rights under the ESA, including filing a complaint, is a reprisal and is prohibited. If your employer terminates, disciplines, or reduces your hours after you raise an ESA concern, you may have both a reprisal complaint and a wrongful dismissal claim.
Speak with an Ontario employment lawyer about your ESA rights
If your employer is not meeting their obligations under the Employment Standards Act, 2000, our team can help you understand your rights and the options available to you. We advise employees across Ontario on Ministry of Labour complaints, unpaid wages, termination entitlements, and workplace rights. Contact us for a confidential consultation.
Call us at 1-800-771-7882 or fill out the form below and we will be in touch.
The article in this client update provides general information and should not be relied on as legal advice or opinion. This publication is copyrighted by Achkar Law Professional Corporation and may not be photocopied or reproduced in any form, in whole or in part, without the express permission of Achkar Law Professional Corporation. ©