Finding out you’re pregnant in Ontario comes with a rush of emotions and an immediate question: what does maternity leave actually look like for me? If you’re scrolling through government websites at 2am trying to decode the difference between Employment Insurance and job-protected leave, you’re not alone. Every expectant parent in Toronto has been there, squinting at acronyms and wondering if they’ll actually be able to afford those precious months with their newborn.
Here’s what matters most: Ontario offers up to 18 months of job-protected leave, but the money you receive comes from federal Employment Insurance benefits, not your employer. That distinction trips up almost everyone at first. You could be eligible for standard benefits (55% of your earnings for up to 12 months) or extended benefits (33% stretched over 18 months). The catch? You need 600 insured hours of work in the past 52 weeks, and there’s a maximum insurable earnings cap that changes annually.
The application process starts 12 weeks before your due date, and timing matters more than you’d think. Submit too early and you might lose weeks of benefits. Wait too long and you’re scrambling while managing a newborn. I learned this the hard way with my first, frantically uploading documents between feeding sessions at 3am in our Leslieville apartment.
Beyond the paperwork lies the reality of actually living on reduced income in one of Canada’s most expensive cities. Whether you’re planning weekend walks through High Park or budgeting for baby essentials, understanding your entitlements now means fewer financial surprises later. Let’s break down exactly what you need to know.

The Two-Part Reality: Leave vs. Benefits (Yes, They’re Different)
Here’s the thing nobody explained to me when I was seven months pregnant and furiously Googling at 2 a.m.: maternity leave in Ontario isn’t one thing. It’s two completely separate systems that happen to overlap, and mixing them up can leave you confused about when to apply, how much money you’ll get, and whether you even need to tell your boss yet.
When I told my manager I was taking maternity leave, she nodded and said, “Great, make sure you apply for your benefits.” I remember thinking: aren’t they the same thing? Turns out, no. Your maternity leave is the time off work itself, the job protection that means your employer can’t fire you for having a baby. That comes from Ontario’s Employment Standards Act, and it’s unpaid. Your employer holds your position, but they don’t pay you a cent during that time.
The money part, the actual paycheque replacement you’ll live on, comes from Employment Insurance (EI) maternity benefits. That’s federal, through Service Canada, and it has nothing to do with your employer beyond them sending in your Record of Employment. You apply separately, wait for approval, and then the government pays you directly.
So when you’re planning your leave, you’re actually coordinating two different pieces. You need to formally request leave from your employer, usually in writing, and you need to apply for EI benefits through Service Canada. Both are yours by right if you qualify, but they don’t happen automatically just because you’re pregnant. Understanding this split saved me from a near-panic when I realized telling my boss wasn’t the same as getting my benefits sorted.
Who Actually Qualifies for EI Maternity Benefits in Ontario
Here’s the thing nobody tells you when you’re Googling maternity benefits at 2 a.m.: you can’t just assume you qualify. I know, I know, you’ve been working and paying into EI forever, so it should be automatic, right? Not quite.
First, let’s get the basics straight. Maternity benefits are specifically for the person who was pregnant and gave birth. That’s it. Your partner will apply for parental benefits separately (different bucket of money, different rules). This comes straight from Service Canada, and yes, it matters for how you fill out the forms later.
Now for the part that trips people up: you need insurable hours. Service Canada looks at the past 52 weeks (or since your last EI claim) and counts how many hours you worked at jobs where EI premiums were deducted. The exact number you need varies based on your region’s unemployment rate, but in the Toronto area, you’re typically looking at 600 insurable hours. If you’ve been working full-time for the past year, you’re likely fine. Part-time? Pull up your pay stubs and start counting, because it adds up faster than you think.
Here’s where Toronto moms I know have hit snags: contract work where you were paid as an independent contractor (no EI deducted means those hours don’t count), self-employment without opting into the EI program, or recently moving to Canada and not having enough work history yet. If you’ve been freelancing or doing gig work, this is your wake-up call to check your status now, not when you’re eight months pregnant.
The good news? You can check your eligibility and your accumulated hours through your My Service Canada Account online. Do it today. Seriously, bookmark this tab and do it after you finish reading. If you’re short on hours or your situation is complicated, you have time to figure out your options, maybe pick up some extra shifts, or look into other provincial supports. Knowing early means you can actually plan instead of panic.

The Money Question: What You’ll Actually Receive
Let’s be honest: when I was pregnant and finally sat down to calculate what my maternity benefits would actually be, I stared at the number and felt my stomach drop. I’d known intellectually that it would be less than my regular salary, but seeing it on paper made it real in a way I wasn’t prepared for.
Here’s the math you need to understand. EI maternity benefits pay 55% of your average insurable earnings, with a maximum of $729 per week in 2026. If you’re earning $70,000 a year, that works out to about $1,346 every two weeks after taxes, compared to your usual take-home. If you’re making less, you’ll receive proportionally less. The cut is significant.
In Toronto terms? That’s your rent suddenly eating up most of your benefit cheque. A one-bedroom in the city averages well over $2,000, so unless your partner can cover housing, you’re looking at benefits that won’t stretch to both rent and everything else. Your monthly TTC pass is $156. A week’s worth of groceries for one person runs $80 to $120, and that’s before you factor in diapers, wipes, and all the baby supplies nobody warns you about.
I learned the hard way that budgeting before leave starts isn’t optional. Three months before my due date, my husband and I went through every expense. We cancelled subscriptions we didn’t need, switched to a cheaper phone plan, and started buying groceries from No Frills instead of Metro. I built up a small cushion in savings specifically for those weeks when the money felt impossibly tight.
Here’s what helped: paying down as much debt as possible beforehand, especially credit cards. Setting aside money during pregnancy for things I knew would come up (like the $300 newborn photography session I really wanted but couldn’t afford on benefits alone). And being brutally honest with myself about what our family could and couldn’t do financially during those months.
The income drop is hard. There’s no sugarcoating it. But knowing the exact numbers ahead of time meant I could plan instead of panic.
Timeline That Actually Makes Sense
Here’s the thing nobody tells you when you’re busy growing a human: timing your maternity benefits is way less intuitive than you’d expect. I thought I’d just apply “when the baby comes” and everything would magically work out. Spoiler alert, that’s not how it works, and getting the timeline wrong can cost you weeks of payments.
You can start receiving maternity benefits as early as 12 weeks before your due date. That’s right, three months out. Now, most Toronto moms I know don’t start quite that early unless there’s a medical reason, but knowing you have that option matters. Maybe you’re commuting from Scarborough to downtown every day and you’re done with the subway by week 28. Maybe your job is physically demanding and you need to step back sooner. The flexibility exists.
The catch? Your benefits can’t extend more than 17 weeks after your due date or the date you actually give birth. So if you start at the earliest possible point (12 weeks before), you’re using up weeks on the front end. If your baby arrives late, you could theoretically run out of coverage sooner than you planned. This is why most women I’ve talked to wait until closer to their due date to start, typically around 4-6 weeks before.
Here’s a practical timeline that makes sense for most Toronto situations:
- 12-16 weeks before due date: Start thinking seriously about when you want to begin leave. Factor in your commute, your physical comfort, and any Toronto-specific commitments like that prenatal yoga class at the community centre you love.
- 8-10 weeks before: Have the conversation with your employer. Give them proper notice about when you plan to start your leave, which helps them arrange coverage and gets your Record of Employment processed on time.
- 4 weeks before your intended start date: Submit your EI application. Don’t wait until your first day of leave. Service Canada recommends applying four weeks in advance, and trust me, you don’t want to be chasing paperwork while dealing with third-trimester insomnia.
- One-week waiting period: After you stop working, there’s a mandatory one-week waiting period before payments begin. You won’t receive benefits for that first week, so budget accordingly.
- Benefits begin: Payments typically arrive about 28 days after you apply, assuming your application is complete and your ROE is submitted. Set up direct deposit so you’re not hunting down cheques.
The waiting period caught me off guard with my first. I’d planned our budget down to the dollar, forgetting that first week would be unpaid. It wasn’t catastrophic, but it meant putting off groceries at Loblaws and living on freezer meals for a bit longer than I’d hoped.
One more reality check: if you’re trying to get on childcare waitlists in Toronto (and you should be, even if you’re not sure of your return-to-work date yet), don’t wait until you’re actually on leave to start making calls. Some centres have waitlists stretching 12-18 months. I know moms who registered for daycare before they’d even bought a crib.

How to Actually Apply (Without Losing Your Mind)
The application itself is less complicated than you think, I promise. You don’t need to be eight months pregnant and crying over your laptop at 2 a.m. (though if you are, you’re not alone).
Start by getting your Record of Employment from your employer. They submit this electronically to Service Canada, usually within five days of your last day of work. You don’t need to chase it down yourself, but it doesn’t hurt to confirm with HR that they’ve sent it. If you’re self-employed and paying into EI, you’ll need proof of your earnings instead.
Next, apply online through your My Service Canada Account. You’ll need your Social Insurance Number, banking information for direct deposit, and details about your pregnancy. The system asks for your due date and when you want benefits to start. Remember, you can apply up to 12 weeks before your due date, but most Toronto moms I know applied around the two-month mark to avoid the waiting period eating into actual baby time.
The application takes about 45 minutes if you have everything ready. Don’t overthink the questions. They’re straightforward, even if the government website looks like it hasn’t been updated since 2003.
If you get stuck or your ROE doesn’t show up in the system, don’t panic. There’s a Service Canada office at 25 St. Clair Avenue East that handles in-person visits. Book an appointment online first. Showing up with your documents and a real human to talk to can sort out most issues faster than calling the 1-800 number and waiting on hold.
One thing nobody mentions: after you apply, expect about four weeks before your first payment arrives. Budget for that gap. It’s frustrating, but knowing it’s coming makes it easier to plan around.
What Changed in 2026 (And Why It Matters)
If you experienced a pregnancy loss this year, there’s something new you need to know. Starting December 2025, federally regulated employees became eligible for eight weeks of pregnancy loss leave. It’s a small but meaningful step forward in recognizing that loss deserves time and space to heal.
Here’s the catch: this currently applies only to federally regulated workplaces, think banks, telecommunications companies, airlines, interprovincial transportation, and some media organizations. If you work for a provincially regulated employer (which is most workplaces in Ontario, including retail, restaurants, healthcare, education, and municipal services), this specific leave doesn’t apply to you yet. It’s frustrating, honestly. Many Toronto moms work in sectors that aren’t covered.
Why does this matter? Because for years, people who experienced miscarriage or stillbirth had to cobble together sick days or go without pay during an impossibly hard time. This leave acknowledges that pregnancy loss isn’t just a medical event, it’s grief that needs time. Eight weeks won’t fix everything, but it gives you breathing room to recover physically and emotionally without worrying about your job.
If you’re not sure whether your employer is federally or provincially regulated, ask your HR department directly. And if you’re facing this situation, please know you don’t have to navigate it alone. Reach out to your healthcare provider, find support through local groups, and give yourself permission to take whatever time you actually need.

Surviving the Leave: Real Talk from Toronto Moms
Here’s what no one told me before I went on leave: the hardest part wasn’t the sleepless nights or the diaper changes. It was the Tuesday afternoon when I realized I hadn’t spoken to another adult in three days, standing in my apartment near Queen and Ossington, watching other people rush to work through the window.
The financial adjustment hit harder than I expected, even though I’d done the math. That 55% income suddenly felt very real when I was comparing prices at No Frills versus Loblaws, and my usual coffee runs to Jet Fuel became a luxury I had to think about. One mom I met at a drop-in told me she’d started meal prepping on Sundays just to make her grocery budget stretch, something she’d never done before having her daughter.
I thought maternity leave would be this peaceful bonding time. Instead, I spent the first month feeling completely untethered from my old life, wondering if I’d made a terrible mistake leaving my job, even temporarily.
The isolation surprised most of the Toronto moms I talked to. Your colleagues are at work. Your childless friends are busy. Your partner goes back after their two weeks. Suddenly you’re alone with a tiny human who can’t hold a conversation, and the days blur together in a way that feels both endless and somehow already gone.
But here’s what saved me: Ontario Early Years Centres. These free drop-in programs scattered across Toronto became my lifeline. The one at Dufferin Grove became my regular Tuesday morning spot. No judgment, free coffee, and other parents who understood why I was wearing the same sweater three days in a row. Toronto Public Library branches run similar programs, and honestly, getting out of the house to sing “Wheels on the Bus” with strangers felt like a social event worth putting on real pants for.
I also found my people through neighbourhood Facebook groups and apps like Peanut. Meeting other moms going through the exact same thing, in the same city, dealing with the same TTC struggles when you’re carrying a stroller down subway stairs made everything feel less lonely. We’d meet at Trinity Bellwoods on good weather days, commiserating about sleep regressions and celebrating the small wins, like finally figuring out how to fold that stupid stroller with one hand.
The joy was there too, in unexpected moments. Weekday trips to the Toronto Zoo when it wasn’t crowded. Slow walks through High Park. Watching my baby discover their hands while sitting on a patio in Leslieville. The leave gave me time I’ll never get back, even when the days felt long and the money felt tight.
Look, I won’t pretend that figuring out maternity leave in Ontario is simple. The forms, the waiting periods, the math on 55% of your income, it’s a lot when you’re already exhausted and maybe a bit scared about everything that’s coming. But here’s what I want you to know: you’re going to figure this out. Thousands of Toronto moms have navigated this same system, felt the same confusion, and come out the other side with their babies and their sanity mostly intact.
Ask the questions you need to ask. Call Service Canada twice if the first person didn’t explain it clearly. Text your friend who went on leave last year. Show up at your local Ontario Early Years Centre even if you feel awkward. There’s no prize for doing this alone, and there’s certainly no shame in admitting you don’t understand how the ROE works or when exactly to submit your application.
Understanding your benefits isn’t just bureaucratic box-checking. It’s taking care of yourself so you can take care of your baby. It’s making sure you get the money you’re entitled to, the time off you need, and the space to adjust to this massive life change.
Surviving maternity leave isn’t about just getting through it. It’s about giving yourself permission to rest, to ask for help, to feel whatever you’re feeling, and to trust that you’ll find your rhythm. You’ve got this.
