Canada Emergency Response Benefit and EI statistics

Please note the Canada Emergency Response Benefit information on this webpage has been updated to provide a breakdown of the total dollar value of CERB and EI benefits paid. To view up to up-to-date statistics on the new Employment Insurance supports and COVID-19 benefits for individuals, you can search for these pages:

  • Employment Insurance (EI) Program Statistics
  • Canada Recovery Benefit (CRB)
  • Canada Recovery Caregiving Benefit (CRCB)
  • Canada Recovery Sickness Benefit (CRSB)

Total Canada Emergency Response Benefit (delivered by Service Canada and Canada Revenue Agency, combined) and EI benefits as of October 4th, 2020

The Department will update the website in the coming months to include data for payments made after October 3, 2020.

Table 1: Total unique applicants by province/territory and age group

Table 2: Total unique applicants by province/territory and gender

Notes

  1. Applicants contained in this data may have found jobs or returned to work and therefore no longer receive CERB benefits.
  2. Unique applicants are people who have applied for the CERB benefit either through CRA and/or Service Canada, or people who applied for EI benefits. A unique applicant is only counted once for the lifetime of the CERB program regardless of the number of times they have applied.
  3. The data for applications received, unique applicants (also broken down by province and territory, age group and gender), applications processed and total dollar value of benefits paid, includes applications for CERB received through the CRA channel and all EI applications received through Service Canada. The vast majority of EI applications received since March 15 were established as CERB claims, with the only exceptions being: applications for which the benefit start date was prior to March 15; applications to renew claims that were active prior to this date; or applications for special benefits (such as Family Caregiver Benefits, Compassionate Care Benefits, Parental and Maternity benefits).
  4. Applications processed includes applications that were already in the queue to be processed for EI on March 15, and some were subsequently processed post March 15. In comparison, applications received includes only those applications that have been received since March 15.
  5. All numbers have been rounded to the nearest ten.
  6. The column 'Gender diverse' represents applicants whose gender is either not disclosed, or is non-binary.
  7. Province and Territory of 'Not Applicable' is used when an applicant provides an address outside of Canada. While the CERB program requires people to reside inside Canada to qualify, some individuals may be currently out of the country on a temporary basis, or working in Canada on a temporary basis. For example: a student who is temporarily abroad, someone temporarily working abroad, someone who could not make it back into the country due to the pandemic, or a temporary worker who has fallen ill but their home address is in another country.
  8. A small number of applicants did not provide a valid address (mailing or residential) and have been grouped in the Province & Territories category of 'Unknown'. As part of the review process, CRA and Service Canada are following up with these applicants.

Was this helpful?

Thanks for your feedback!

Related Blog Posts

Join our 150K of happy users

  • Get original papers written according to your instructions
  • Save time for what matters most
Place an order