Employment Law

Bardal Factors in Alberta: How Courts Calculate Severance

Severance pay envelope on a desk, representing a termination offer and common law severance assessment in Alberta.

When Alberta courts determine how much severance an employee is owed after termination without cause, they do not rely on employment standards minimums or a fixed formula.

Instead, courts apply the Bardal factors — a set of legal principles Alberta courts use to assess reasonable notice and common law severance.

Understanding how the Bardal factors apply in Alberta helps employees access whether a severance offer reflects what the law actually requires.


What Are the Bardal Factors in Alberta?

Alberta courts use the Bardal factors to determine how much notice or severance a non-unionized employee should receive under common law.

These factors originate from the landmark case Bardal v. Globe & Mail Ltd. and form the foundation of severance law across Canada, including in Alberta.

Rather than focusing on length of service alone, Alberta judges assess the full employment context when determining reasonable notice.


The Four Bardal Factors Alberta Courts Consider

Alberta courts consider four core factors when assessing the Bardal factors:

1️⃣ Age of the Employee

Alberta courts often award longer notice periods to older employees, particularly where age or market conditions make re-employment more difficult.

2️⃣ Length of Service

Longer service generally increases severance entitlement. However, Alberta courts do not treat length of service as decisive on its own. Even short-service employees may be entitled to months of severance in appropriate cases.

3️⃣ Position and Level of Responsibility

Senior, managerial, executive, or highly specialized roles often attract longer notice periods, especially when comparable positions are limited within Alberta’s job market.

4️⃣ Availability of Comparable Employment

Alberta courts closely examine how realistic it is for an employee to find similar work, taking into account:

  • Industry conditions in Alberta
  • Economic and regional factors
  • Specialized skills
  • Geographic limitations

This factor often plays a significant role in severance outcomes.


How Alberta Courts Apply the Bardal Factors

Alberta judges do not assign fixed weights to the Bardal factors or apply them mechanically.

Instead, courts:

  • Consider all four factors together
  • Weigh them in context
  • Adjust the notice period based on real-world employment conditions in Alberta

As a result, two Alberta employees with similar service histories can receive very different severance awards.


Bardal Factors and Common Law Severance in Alberta

The Bardal factors form the backbone of common law severance in Alberta.

While Alberta’s Employment Standards Code sets minimum termination notice requirements, courts rely on the Bardal factors to determine an employee’s full severance pay in Alberta.

In many cases, common law severance assessed using the Bardal factors exceeds employment standards minimums by a wide margin.

💡 For a broader explanation, see Common Law Severance in Alberta.

Is There a Bardal Factors Calculator for Alberta?

Courts do not use a fixed formula when applying the Bardal factors. Each case depends on its own facts and employment context.

That said, tools like the official Severance Pay Calculator use real court decisions and common law principles — including the Bardal factors — to provide a practical estimate of what an Alberta employee may be entitled to receive.

The calculator helps employees in Alberta:

  • Understand realistic severance ranges
  • Compare an employer’s offer to common law outcomes
  • Decide whether further legal review makes sense
📲 Use our Severance Pay Calculator to estimate your potential severance, then speak with a lawyer to confirm how the Bardal facors apply to your situation.

When the Bardal Factors Point to a Wrongful Dismissal Claim in Alberta

In Alberta employment law, wrongful dismissal usually means an employer failed to provide reasonable notice or severance, not that the employer acted improperly.

When an employer terminates an employee without cause and provides severance that does not reflect the Bardal factors, the termination may qualify as wrongful dismissal.

Once employers understand their legal exposure under Alberta’s Bardal analysis, most claims resolve through negotiation, not court.


Why Alberta Employers Often Misapply the Bardal Factors

Employers in Alberta often:

  • Rely on employment standards minimums
  • Use internal severance guidelines
  • Overlook regional and industry-specific re-employment challenges

Alberta courts, however, focus on the full employment context, not internal policies alone.

When employers misapply the Bardal factors, employees often accept severance that falls well below what Alberta courts would award.


How an Alberta Employment Lawyer Uses the Bardal Factors

An experienced Alberta employment lawyer:

  • Reviews all four Bardal factors together
  • Compares outcomes from similar Alberta court decisions
  • Assesses whether a termination clause is enforceable
  • Confirms whether a severance offer aligns with common law standards

This review helps ensure that a severance offer reflects how Alberta courts actually apply the Bardal factors.


Get Advice Before You Accept a Severance Offer

Once you sign a severance agreement, you usually give up the right to pursue additional compensation.

Before accepting an offer:

  • Understand how the Bardal factors apply in Alberta
  • Use the Severance Pay Calculator to estimate your entitlement
  • Get clear legal advice on whether the offer reflects common law outcomes

Contact Samfiru Tumarkin LLP to review your severance offer and confirm what the law requires your employer to pay.

📞 Call us at 1-855-821-5900 or request a consultation online.
⚠️ Unionized? Only your union can represent you. By law, employment lawyers can’t represent unionized employees.

How Alberta Courts Calculate Severance

The Bardal factors guide how judges assess common law severance. Learn what you may be owed, and get legal advice before you sign.

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