What insurable earnings mean in Canadian payroll and why payroll treats them differently from total gross pay.
Insurable earnings are the Canadian payroll earnings amount used for EI-related payroll treatment.
From a payroll perspective, the term matters because payroll does not always use total gross pay as the base for every payroll rule. Insurable earnings identify the portion of earnings that matter for this specific Canadian payroll purpose.
Insurable earnings matter because they affect:
They matter because readers often see the final deduction line but do not know the payroll base behind it.
Insurable earnings appear during payroll calculation and later in payroll reporting. In practice, payroll may:
That makes insurable earnings a payroll-calculation and recordkeeping term.
An employee has gross pay for the period, but payroll still needs to determine the earnings amount relevant for EI-related handling.
That EI-relevant amount is the insurable earnings figure payroll tracks and uses for that part of Canadian payroll.
Insurable earnings are often confused with: