ROE

What an ROE means in Canadian payroll, when it is used, and how it differs from a pay stub or T4.

ROE

ROE stands for Record of Employment in Canadian payroll.

It is a payroll record used when an interruption of earnings or another qualifying employment change means the employer needs to provide employment and earnings information for Service Canada context. It is not just another ordinary pay-stub or year-end-slip concept.

Why ROE Matters

ROE matters because it affects:

  • payroll recordkeeping when employment changes
  • employee questions during stressful transition periods
  • how insurable hours and earnings history are documented
  • the distinction between ordinary payroll records and interruption-of-earnings records

It is one of the most important Canadian payroll terms because employees often encounter it when they urgently need clarity.

How It Works In Canada

When an interruption of earnings or other qualifying event occurs, payroll may need to review the employee’s payroll history and prepare an ROE. The ROE is built from payroll records, but it serves a different job than either the pay stub or the T4.

That means the ROE should be understood as:

  • different from a pay stub, which explains one payroll period
  • different from a T4, which summarizes the year
  • tied to insurable hours and payroll history

Example

An employee stops working and payroll prepares the final pay for the last period worked. Payroll may also need to prepare an ROE based on the employee’s payroll history and interruption-of-earnings situation. The paycheque pays the employee. The ROE documents the employment record.

Common Misunderstandings

  • ROE is not the same as a final pay cheque. One is a payment and one is a record.
  • ROE is not a T4. They serve different reporting purposes.
  • ROE is not just a copy of the pay stub. It is a separate payroll record tied to employment interruption context.

Knowledge Check

  1. Is an ROE the same as a normal pay stub? No.
  2. Can payroll use earnings history and insurable-hours records when preparing an ROE? Yes.
  3. Is the ROE mainly about year-end tax reporting? No.

Caveat

Exact ROE timing and content depend on the interruption-of-earnings situation and current Service Canada rules. The stable concept is that the ROE is a distinct Canadian payroll record, not a generic year-end or per-period payroll document.