Severance Pay

What severance pay means in Canadian payroll and how it differs from ordinary wages, final pay, and other termination-related amounts.

Severance Pay

Severance pay is compensation paid in connection with the end of employment rather than as ordinary ongoing current-period wages.

In payroll context, the term matters because end-of-employment pay often includes multiple different amounts. Payroll needs to keep severance language distinct from ordinary wages, vacation pay, final regular pay, and recordkeeping steps such as the ROE.

Why Severance Pay Matters

Severance pay matters because it affects:

  • final payroll communication with the employee
  • how separation-related amounts are labeled
  • payroll review when a termination payment is added
  • the distinction between ordinary earned wages and end-of-employment compensation

Without clear language, final payroll packages become confusing very quickly.

How It Works In Canada

In Canadian payroll, a termination event can involve several different amounts, such as:

  • final regular wages
  • vacation pay or vacation payout
  • severance or termination-related compensation
  • other employer-specific or settlement-related amounts

Payroll may need to process these amounts separately or label them clearly so the records match the nature of the payment. That is why severance pay should not be treated as just another ordinary wages line.

Example

An employee’s employment ends. Payroll processes the employee’s last regular pay for hours already worked, pays out vacation-related amounts if required, and also records a separate severance amount approved by the employer. The records stay clearer because the separation-related amount is not merged into ordinary wages without explanation.

Common Misunderstandings

  • Severance pay is not the same as final regular wages.
  • Severance pay is not the same as vacation pay.
  • Severance pay is not the ROE. The ROE is a payroll record, not the payment itself.

Knowledge Check

  1. Is severance pay the same as ordinary wages for the last period worked? No.
  2. Can final payroll include both regular wages and severance-related amounts? Yes.
  3. Is the ROE the same thing as severance pay? No.

Caveat

Termination-related pay can vary significantly by province, employment contract, employer policy, settlement terms, and how the amount must be reported. Treat severance pay as a concept label, not as a complete rulebook for termination payroll.