Ontario Job Posting Pay Transparency Rules Starting 2026

Ontario Introduces New Job Posting Rules Effective January 1, 2026: What Employers Need to Know

Ontario employers who advertise publicly advertised job postings should prepare for major compliance changes beginning January 1, 2026. Ontario has introduced new requirements under O. Reg. 476/24 under the Employment Standards Act (ESA) that affect how job postings must be written and how hiring information must be disclosed.

These changes are designed to increase transparency in recruitment and hiring, including pay disclosure requirements and new limits on what employers can request from candidates.

Below is a clear summary of the key rules and exemptions employers should understand.

1. When do these new requirements take effect?

The rules take effect on January 1, 2026 and apply to employers who advertise publicly advertised job postings in Ontario.

2. Important exemption: Employers with fewer than 25 employees

The requirements will not apply to employers who employ fewer than 25 employees on the day the posting is posted.

For employers near the 25-employee threshold, this exemption may require careful monitoring because employee count on the posting date determines whether compliance is required.

3. Requirement to include expected compensation

Ontario employers will be required to include in a publicly advertised job posting:

  • The expected compensation, or
  • A range of expected compensation for the position

Special rule: If a range is included

If an employer provides a range, the range is limited to an amount equivalent to $50,000 per year or less.

Compensation rule does not apply if pay exceeds $200,000/year

This requirement does not apply if:

  • The expected compensation is equivalent to more than $200,000 per year, or
  • The compensation range ends at an amount equivalent to more than $200,000 per year

4. Requirement to disclose use of artificial intelligence in hiring

Employers must disclose in a publicly advertised job posting if artificial intelligence is used during the hiring process.

This will be especially important for employers that use AI tools for:

  • Resume screening
  • Candidate ranking
  • Automated interview assessments
  • Automated candidate selection tools

5. Prohibition against including “Canadian experience” requirements

Employers will be prohibited from including in a job posting or associated application form any requirement related to Canadian experience.

This is a major change that impacts how employers define minimum requirements and may require review of templates used in recruitment.

6. Requirement to disclose whether a vacancy exists

Employers must disclose in a publicly advertised job posting whether the posting is for an existing vacancy or not.

This requirement addresses concerns about job postings that may not represent a real current opening.

7. Requirement to provide information to interviewed applicants

If an employer interviews an applicant for a publicly advertised job posting, the employer must provide information to that applicant about whether a hiring decision has been made for that posting.

The information must be provided:

  • Within 45 days after the date of the interview, or
  • If interviewed more than once, within 45 days after the date of the last interview

Employers may provide this information:

  • In person
  • In writing
  • Or using technology

8. Definitions matter: Key terms under O. Reg. 476/24

The regulation defines several key terms, including:

  • Artificial intelligence
  • Publicly advertised job posting
  • Compensation
  • Interview

Because compliance depends on these definitions, employers should ensure they understand what qualifies as a publicly advertised job posting under the regulation and whether a role falls within scope.

Practical compliance tips for employers

To prepare for January 1, 2026, employers should consider:

  • Updating job posting templates to include compensation language
  • Reviewing internal HR processes for AI use in hiring and ensuring disclosures are included
  • Removing Canadian experience requirements from postings and application forms
  • Adding vacancy disclosure language (vacancy exists or not)
  • Implementing a process to notify interviewed candidates within the 45-day deadline
  • Training hiring managers and recruiters on these new obligations

 

Contact Information

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