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Create a legally compliant indefinite-term Employment Contract for Canada. Covers compensation, probation, statutory deductions (CPP/EI), termination notice requirements, non-solicitation, confidentiality, and provincial ESA compliance.

What Is a Employment Contract — Indefinite Term (Canada)?

A Canadian Indefinite-Term Employment Contract is a legally binding agreement between an employer and an employee that establishes an ongoing employment relationship with no predetermined end date. Unlike the United States, where the at-will employment doctrine allows employers to terminate employees for any reason without notice, Canadian employment law provides employees with robust protections against arbitrary dismissal. Every province in Canada has enacted Employment Standards legislation that sets minimum notice periods, overtime pay thresholds, vacation entitlements, and other fundamental employment protections that cannot be contracted below.

The concept of indefinite-term employment is the default employment arrangement in Canada. When an employer hires an employee without specifying a fixed end date, the employment is presumed to be indefinite, meaning it continues until one party provides proper notice of termination. This stands in stark contrast to at-will employment, which does not exist anywhere in Canada. The closest Canadian equivalent to an at-will arrangement is the probationary period, during which an employer may terminate with reduced notice as permitted by the applicable Employment Standards Act, but even during probation, the employer cannot terminate without any notice whatsoever in most provinces.

Canadian indefinite-term employment contracts are governed by a layered framework of federal and provincial legislation. At the federal level, the Canada Labour Code applies to federally regulated industries such as banking, telecommunications, and interprovincial transportation. For the vast majority of employers, however, provincial Employment Standards Acts provide the governing framework: Ontario's Employment Standards Act, 2000 (S.O. 2000, c. 41), British Columbia's Employment Standards Act (R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 113), Alberta's Employment Standards Code (R.S.A. 2000, c. E-9), and Quebec's Act respecting labour standards (R.S.Q. c. N-1.1). These statutes establish minimum wages, maximum hours of work, overtime pay requirements, vacation entitlements, parental leave, and critically, minimum termination notice periods that employers must comply with.

The employment contract also triggers mandatory statutory deductions. Employers must withhold and remit Canada Pension Plan contributions, Employment Insurance premiums, and federal and provincial income tax from each pay period. The employer must match the employee's CPP contributions and pay 1.4 times the employee's EI premium. Failure to make proper remittances can result in significant penalties and personal liability for directors under the Income Tax Act s.227.1.

When Do You Need a Employment Contract — Indefinite Term (Canada)?

A Canadian Indefinite-Term Employment Contract is essential whenever a business hires an individual as an employee on an ongoing basis, whether full-time or part-time. The contract should be signed before the employee's first day of work, because employment terms must be accepted before the employment relationship begins to constitute valid consideration. The Ontario Court of Appeal confirmed in Hobbs v. TDI International that a contract presented after employment has commenced may not be enforceable if there is no fresh consideration for the new terms.

This contract is particularly critical for defining termination provisions. Without a written termination clause, common-law reasonable notice applies, and under the Bardal factors established in Bardal v. Globe and Mail Ltd. (1960), courts consider the employee's age, length of service, character of employment, and availability of similar employment when determining the notice period. Common-law notice awards routinely reach 12 to 24 months for long-service employees in senior positions, representing a significant financial obligation for the employer. A well-drafted termination clause that limits notice to the statutory minimum under the applicable Employment Standards Act can substantially reduce the employer's exposure to common-law damages.

However, drafting enforceable termination clauses requires exceptional care. The Ontario Court of Appeal in Waksdale v. Swegon North America Inc. (2020 ONCA 391) held that if any part of a termination clause violates the Employment Standards Act, even a for-cause termination provision that falls below the statutory minimum, the entire termination clause is void and the employee is entitled to common-law reasonable notice. This decision fundamentally changed how termination clauses must be drafted in Ontario and has been influential in other provinces.

Indefinite-term employment contracts are also essential when the employee will have access to confidential information, trade secrets, or customer relationships. Non-solicitation clauses remain enforceable across Canada when reasonable in scope, duration, and geographic area. However, non-compete clauses face significant restrictions. In Ontario, the Working for Workers Act, 2021 (ESA s.67.2) banned non-compete agreements for most employees, with exceptions only for C-suite executives. In other provinces, non-competes must satisfy the reasonableness test established by the Supreme Court of Canada in Shafron v. KRG Insurance Brokers (2009 SCC 6), which requires clear territorial limitations, reasonable time restrictions, and a scope limited to the activities that genuinely compete with the employer's business.

What to Include in Your Employment Contract — Indefinite Term (Canada)

A comprehensive Canadian Indefinite-Term Employment Contract must begin by identifying both parties with their full legal names and addresses. The contract should specify whether the employer is an individual, corporation, partnership, or sole proprietorship, and reference the applicable provincial or federal incorporation. The employee's position, including job title, department, reporting structure, and primary duties and responsibilities, must be clearly stated. Indicating that the employment is on an indefinite-term basis is essential to distinguish this arrangement from fixed-term employment, which has different termination implications.

The start date and any probationary period must be clearly defined. Probation periods in Canada typically range from three months in Ontario and British Columbia to ninety days in Alberta, during which the employer has the right to terminate with reduced notice as permitted by the applicable Employment Standards Act. The contract should specify the workplace location or confirm that the position permits remote work, as the work location determines which province's employment standards legislation applies.

Compensation must be stated in Canadian dollars, specifying either an annual salary or hourly wage, the pay frequency (bi-weekly and semi-monthly are the most common in Canada), and any variable compensation such as bonuses, commissions, or profit sharing. The contract must acknowledge that all payments are subject to mandatory statutory deductions including CPP contributions, EI premiums, and income tax. Overtime pay must comply with provincial thresholds, which vary significantly: Ontario and Alberta require overtime pay for hours exceeding 44 per week, while British Columbia and Manitoba set the threshold at 40 hours per week. The overtime rate is typically 1.5 times the regular rate.

Vacation entitlements must meet or exceed the provincial statutory minimum, which is generally two weeks or four percent of gross wages after one year of employment in most provinces, though Saskatchewan provides three weeks from the first year. The contract should address statutory holidays, sick leave, and personal leave entitlements. Benefits such as extended health insurance, dental coverage, vision care, life insurance, disability insurance, and RRSP matching should be listed if applicable.

The termination clause is the single most important provision in a Canadian employment contract. Both the without-cause and the for-cause termination provisions must comply with the applicable Employment Standards Act in every respect. The notice period for termination without cause must meet or exceed statutory minimums, and the contract should address whether the employer will provide working notice, pay in lieu of notice, or a combination. Severance pay obligations, benefit continuation during the notice period, and the employee's obligations upon termination must all be specified. Confidentiality obligations should protect the employer's trade secrets and proprietary information, with IP assignment provisions noting that Copyright Act s.13(3) provides automatic employer ownership for works created in the course of employment. Non-solicitation restrictions should be reasonable in duration and scope, and the governing law clause should reference the province where the employee primarily works.

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