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Sick pay: Australia vs Canada

Statutory sick pay in Australia and Canada, side by side, with the primary source for every figure.

How does sick pay compare between Australia and Canada?

Australia: 10 days' paid personal/carer's leave a year for full-timers, employer-funded, accruing from day one with unlimited carryover. Canada: Ontario mandates 3 job-protected sick days a year, and they are unpaid. Federally regulated employees get 10 paid days; Quebec pays the first 2.

Australia vs Canada, side by side

AustraliaCanada
The rule10 days' paid personal/carer's leave a year for full-timers, employer-funded, accruing from day one with unlimited carryover.Ontario mandates 3 job-protected sick days a year, and they are unpaid. Federally regulated employees get 10 paid days; Quebec pays the first 2.
Key numbersEntitlement: 10 days a year full-time, pro-rata part-time; Who pays: Employer, at base rate; Waiting days: NoneOntario: 3 days a year, unpaid, job-protected; Federally regulated: 10 paid days, accruing 1 per month; Quebec: 2 paid days after 3 months

Australia

Sick and carer's leave are one combined entitlement under the National Employment Standards: 1/26 of ordinary annual hours, which lands at 10 days on a standard week. The employer pays at the base rate, there are no waiting days, unused balance rolls over indefinitely, and casuals are excluded (their loading compensates).

  • Entitlement10 days a year full-time, pro-rata part-time
  • Who paysEmployer, at base rate
  • Waiting daysNone
  • CarryoverUnlimited
  • Not paid out on termination, unlike annual leave.
  • Strictly an hours-based entitlement: 10 days assumes a five-day pattern.

Source: Fair Work Ombudsman (NES, in force since 2010). Checked July 2026.

Canada

This is the market where generalising goes wrong fastest. Ontario's ESA gives 3 unpaid, job-protected sick days a year (the paid pandemic-era days ended in 2023). Federally regulated employers owe up to 10 paid medical days, accruing monthly. Quebec pays 2 days after 3 months' service, BC mandates 5 paid days, and the rest of the provinces write their own rules.

  • Ontario3 days a year, unpaid, job-protected
  • Federally regulated10 paid days, accruing 1 per month
  • Quebec2 paid days after 3 months
  • Province variationSubstantial (BC 5 paid days)
  • Any copy implying Ontario has statutory paid sick days is wrong as of July 2026.
  • Federal paid days accrue monthly, so a new hire does not start with 10.

Source: Ontario ESA guide (Unpaid regime since 2019). Checked July 2026.

Hiring in both markets?

Put a full number on each side with the true-cost calculators: True cost of an employee (Australia) and True cost of an employee (Canada). The complete six-market picture is on the Sick pay by country page.

Sources

Every figure on this page comes from the government source for its market.

MarketSourceRule / effectiveVerified
AustraliaFair Work OmbudsmanNES, in force since 2010Checked July 2026
CanadaOntario ESA guideUnpaid regime since 2019Checked July 2026
Where Compono fits

Comparing entitlements is the easy half of hiring across markets. The hard half is whether the person you hire in Sydney, Singapore or Seattle will actually work out, and that risk looks the same in every jurisdiction. Compono matches candidates on how they work, not just what the CV claims, so the hires behind these numbers hold up wherever you make them.

See how it works

Common questions

What is the rule on sick pay in Australia?

10 days' paid personal/carer's leave a year for full-timers, employer-funded, accruing from day one with unlimited carryover. Sick and carer's leave are one combined entitlement under the National Employment Standards: 1/26 of ordinary annual hours, which lands at 10 days on a standard week.

What is the rule on sick pay in Canada?

Ontario mandates 3 job-protected sick days a year, and they are unpaid. Federally regulated employees get 10 paid days; Quebec pays the first 2. This is the market where generalising goes wrong fastest.

Where can I check the source figures?

The sources section below links the Australia and Canada government pages every figure on this page was verified against in July 2026.

This page is general information, not legal advice. We check figures annually and update them on a best-efforts basis, but employment rules change and we cannot promise everything here is current or complete. Before you act on it, confirm the detail with the Fair Work Ombudsman, your provincial employment standards office or your own adviser. Last reviewed July 2026.