Employment and Labor Law

Long-Term Illness / Sick Leave in Canada: What Employers Need to Know

British Columbia and Alberta are the latest provinces to move to a 27‑week, job‑protected illness / sick leave. With Bill 30 receiving Royal Assent on November 27, 2025, B.C. implemented the 27‑week leave, a significant change that follows similar reforms already adopted in many other provinces. Alberta continued the trend by announcing similar changes to its employment standards legislation effective January 1, 2026.

These developments come amid a broader recalibration of Canada’s sick‑leave framework, following the federal extension of Employment Insurance sickness benefits and provincial efforts to align with that federal standard. This change signals continued momentum in long‑term medical leave and requires employers to update their policies, tracking systems and disability-management practices to remain compliant and manage extended absences effectively.

Federal Baseline: EI Sickness Benefits up to 26 Weeks

The federal government extended EI sickness benefits from 15 to 26 weeks for claims established on or after December 18, 2022. In addition, federally regulated private-sector employees also have medical leave protections under the Canada Labour Code, including up to 27 weeks of unpaid medical leave and a separate entitlement to paid medical leave.

Alberta: Extension of Long-Term Illness Leave from 16 weeks to 27 weeks
The Alberta government has announced that, effective January 1, 2026, employees can take up to 27 weeks of long-term illness and injury leave per calendar year. If an employee started the leave prior to January 1, 2026, the length of leave can be adjusted. If the new end date of the leave goes beyond the date on the medical certificate provided to the employer, a new medical certificate must be provided to the employer. This represents an extension to the 16 weeks of leave that have been available to employees in Alberta since 2018.

British Columbia: New 27-Week Leave Now in Force
On October 20, 2025, B.C. introduced Bill 30 to create a new long‑term, job‑protected medical leave. The Bill recently received Royal Assent and is now in force. It amends the Employment Standards Act to provide up to 27 weeks of unpaid, job‑protected leave within a 52‑week period for a serious personal illness or injury. Employees qualify if they are unable to work for at least seven consecutive days. The leave may be taken in blocks of one or more weeks, either consecutively or intermittently, to accommodate treatment schedules or episodic conditions. To access the leave, employees must provide a certificate from a health practitioner, such as a medical doctor or a nurse practitioner, confirming their inability to work and the expected start and end dates.

Ontario: 27 Week Long-Term Illness Leave
Effective June 19, 2025, Ontario established a new unpaid, job‑protected “long‑term illness leave” of up to 27 weeks in a 52‑week period. Eligibility requires 13 consecutive weeks of employment and a certificate from a qualified health practitioner stating that the employee has a serious medical condition and specifying the period during which the employee will not be working. The leave can be taken in non‑consecutive periods within the 52‑week window. If an employee takes any part of a week as long‑term illness leave, an employer may deem that a full week has been taken. However, for purposes of scheduling, employers cannot require an employee to take a full week off, prevent work earlier in the week, or prevent a return to work later in the week.

Other Provinces: Long-Term Sick Leave Entitlements
The following jurisdictions have implemented or announced long‑term sick leave aligned to a 27-week framework. Key features include eligibility thresholds and certification requirements.

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