Semi-Monthly Pay

What semi-monthly pay means in Canadian payroll and how twice-a-month payroll differs from a biweekly schedule.

Semi-Monthly Pay

Semi-monthly pay means payroll pays the employee twice in each calendar month on fixed recurring dates.

In payroll terms, this matters because semi-monthly pay is often confused with biweekly pay. Both feel frequent, but the timing pattern is different, and that difference affects payroll calendars and employee expectations.

Why Semi-Monthly Pay Matters

Semi-monthly pay matters because it affects:

  • how salary is allocated across the month
  • how employees interpret their pay dates
  • how calendar months compare with one another
  • how payroll explains the difference between twice-a-month and every-two-weeks schedules

It is one of the most common timing questions on Canadian paycheques because the terms sound similar even when the pay pattern is not.

How It Works In Canada

In Canadian payroll, semi-monthly pay usually means employees are paid on two fixed dates each month, such as the 15th and the last day of the month, or another comparable fixed schedule.

That means employees generally see:

  • two pay dates in each calendar month
  • pay periods shaped around fixed month-based timing
  • salary allocations that follow the employer’s semi-monthly cycle

Unlike biweekly payroll, semi-monthly payroll is tied more closely to calendar-month structure than to a rolling 14-day pattern.

Example

An employer pays employees on the 15th and the last business day of each month. That is a semi-monthly schedule. The employee receives two payroll payments in each calendar month, even though the exact number of days in each pay period may not always be identical.

Common Misunderstandings

  • Semi-monthly pay is not the same as biweekly pay. Semi-monthly is twice a month; biweekly is every two weeks.
  • Semi-monthly pay is not the same as one specific pay date. It is the recurring twice-a-month pattern.
  • Semi-monthly pay does not mean exactly 14 days between every payment. The month structure can create different gaps between pay dates.

Knowledge Check

  1. Does semi-monthly pay usually mean two payroll payments each month? Yes.
  2. Is semi-monthly pay the same as biweekly pay? No.
  3. Are the gaps between semi-monthly pay dates always exactly 14 days? No.

Caveat

Fixed pay dates, business-day adjustments, and the precise cutoffs around each semi-monthly cycle vary by employer and payroll system.