Increase from $17:20 to $17.60 an hour will take effect October 1st
News from the Ontario Government of Premier Doug Ford
Posted September 29th, 2025 on Niagara At Large
A Brief Foreword Note from Doug Draper at Niagara At Large – According to the Ontario Living Wage Network, a province-wide group of employers, employees, non-profits, researchers, and proponents of decent work standards for all Ontario workers, a “living wage” in Niagara that would at least give someone a a chance to pay rent and put food on their table is now $20.90 an hour, more than three dollars more than Ford’s new minimum wage.
Now here is the Ford government’s news release –

Ontario Premier Doug Ford believes minimum wage workers are worth another 40 cents an hour.
TORONTO —The Ontario government is raising the minimum wage from $17.20 to $17.60 an hour, effective October 1, which will support over 800,000 workers. This annualized wage increase of 2.4 per cent is based on the Ontario Consumer Price Index (CPI) and delivers on the government’s plan to protect and support workers while keeping Ontario competitive in the face of U.S. tariffs.
“At a time when many families are feeling the pressure of global economic uncertainty, our government will protect Ontario workers with a minimum wage increase that supports our world-class workforce,” said David Piccini, Minister of Labour, Immigration, Training and Skills Development. “We will continue to take action to build a strong, resilient workforce ready to face whatever comes our way.”
As a result of the changes, a worker making the general minimum wage and working 40 hours per week will get an annual pay increase of more than $800. Under the Employment Standards Act, Ontario’s minimum wage increases annually based on the Ontario CPI, a measure of inflation that represents changes in prices experienced by Ontario consumers.
This increase is just one of the ways the government is delivering on its plan to protect Ontario workers. Since its launch in 2021, Ontario has invested $1.5 billion through the SDF Training Stream and Capital Stream to help train more than one million workers for in-demand careers.
As announced in the 2025 Budget: A Plan to Protect Ontario, the government is investing $1 billion more through the Skills Development Fund over the next three years, bringing the total to $2.5 billion, to support key industrial sectors and help train even more workers.
From the Ontario Living Wage Network living wage in Niagara in 2025 begins at – 
About the Ontario Living Wage Network – https://www.ontariolivingwage.ca/
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