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🇨🇦 Canada · New Brunswick · Employment Standards Act (RSNB 1973, c E-7.2)

New Brunswick Employment Standards 2025

Statutory minimums for workers in New Brunswick under the Employment Standards Act (RSNB 1973, c E-7.2): minimum wage, notice periods, vacation entitlement. These are floors — your employment contract may provide more generous terms.

Minimum wage

$15.30/hr

Effective April 2024; indexed annually to CPI

Max statutory notice

4 weeks

At 5+ years

Statutory severance

No separate entitlement

Notice pay only

Statutory notice periods

If your employer terminates your employment (without cause), you are entitled to notice — or pay in lieu — under the Employment Standards Act (RSNB 1973, c E-7.2). The statutory minimums by length of service are:

Length of serviceNotice required
6 months – 5 years2 weeks
5+ years4 weeks

Statutory minimums only. Employment contracts and common law reasonable notice may provide significantly more. Wrongful dismissal claims can result in much longer notice periods through the courts.

Severance pay

New Brunswick does not have statutory severance pay separate from notice under the Employment Standards Act (RSNB 1973, c E-7.2). Your entitlement on termination without cause is the notice period above (or pay in lieu). However, common law reasonable notice — determined by courts based on age, seniority, character of employment, and availability of similar work — can be substantially longer than the statutory minimum.

Vacation entitlement

Under the Employment Standards Act (RSNB 1973, c E-7.2), employees are entitled to: 2 weeks (4%) for first 8 years; 3 weeks (6%) after 8 years.

Vacation pay accrues as a percentage of gross wages earned during the vacation entitlement year. Your employer must either provide the vacation as paid time off or, if agreed in writing, pay out the accrued vacation pay.

Minimum wage

The general minimum wage in New Brunswick is $15.30/hr. Effective April 2024; indexed annually to CPI.

The federal minimum wage ($17.30/hr as of April 2024) applies only to federally regulated workers — those in banking, airlines, railways, and telecommunications. If you work for a provincially regulated employer in New Brunswick, the New Brunswick rate applies.

Notice period calculator

Calculate your statutory notice entitlement based on years of service. Federal minimums applied — adjust for New Brunswick rules above.

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Take-home pay calculator

Work out your net pay after federal and provincial income tax, CPP, and EI deductions.

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Frequently asked questions

What is the minimum wage in New Brunswick in 2025?

The general minimum wage in New Brunswick is $15.30/hr. Effective April 2024; indexed annually to CPI

How much notice am I entitled to if I'm let go in New Brunswick?

Under the Employment Standards Act (RSNB 1973, c E-7.2), the statutory notice entitlement is: 6 months – 5 years → 2 weeks; 5+ years → 4 weeks. Your employment contract may provide more, but cannot provide less.

Does New Brunswick have statutory severance pay separate from notice?

No. New Brunswick does not have statutory severance pay separate from notice under the Employment Standards Act (RSNB 1973, c E-7.2). Employers may provide enhanced severance contractually, and courts may award common law reasonable notice on top of the statutory minimum.

How much vacation am I entitled to in New Brunswick?

Under the Employment Standards Act (RSNB 1973, c E-7.2): 2 weeks (4%) for first 8 years; 3 weeks (6%) after 8 years. These are statutory minimums; your employment contract may provide more generous vacation.

Can my employer pay me in lieu of notice instead of working my notice period?

Yes. In New Brunswick, as in all Canadian provinces, an employer may provide pay in lieu of notice (PILON) instead of requiring you to work through the notice period. The payment must equal what you would have earned during the notice period, including regular wages and the value of other benefits.

Source: New Brunswick Employment Standards. Verified 2025. This page provides general information and is not legal advice. Employment situations often have complexity a summary cannot capture — speak to an employment lawyer or your provincial labour standards office for advice specific to your situation.

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