Social Insurance Number

Social Insurance Number — record on file

•••-•••-286

Show full number (this training profile)
046-454-286

Active Service Canada

Production systems usually mask the SIN on general pages; full digits are collected only where income tax, CPP, EI, or other permitted uses require them. Training data only — do not use a real SIN here.

Record on file

Issuer: Service Canada. Status: Active. Approximate issue year: 2014. Last verified: 2025-11-03T14:22:00-05:00. Verification method: issuer registry.

Masked display

Letters and online summaries often print a masked value (for example •••-•••-286). This page does the same: the full nine digits appear only in the expandable section above, where a trainer can compare them to T4 and payroll scenarios.

Privacy and requests for your SIN

Service Canada does not use unsolicited text or email to ask for your full SIN. If you suspect misuse, contact the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre and consider a fraud alert with credit bureaus. The SIN is not general photo ID for retail; employers, financial institutions, and government programs request it only when a law or program rules require it.

Where the SIN is used

Payroll systems use your SIN on every T4 so the Canada Revenue Agency can match employment income to the right person. The same number anchors CPP and EI premiums in boxes 16–18, which in turn feed contribution histories for CPP, EI, and eventually benefit eligibility screens.

When you move provinces or change your legal name, the SIN usually stays the same but each program must be notified separately—there is no automatic cascade from one checkbox to every registry.

Employers, banks, and schools

Employers need your SIN for lawful payroll and T4 issuance. Banks may request it when registering registered accounts so CRA can track contribution room and grants. Educational institutions may use it for tax forms such as T2202; they should not display it on public class lists.

Social Insurance Number (SIN) — why it appears everywhere

The SIN is the key that links you to the Canada Pension Plan, Employment Insurance, income tax, many benefits, and registered education savings grants. Employers use it on T4s; banks may ask for it when registering tax-advantaged accounts; provinces sometimes mirror it in their own registries under strict limits.

Service Canada issues first SINs and replacements after marriage, citizenship, or corrections. The number itself is not identity proof for retailers—businesses should collect it only when a law or regulation requires it.

Masking in UI (e.g., •••-•••-286) reduces shoulder-surfing risk but does not replace access control. Logs, screenshots, and analytics must avoid storing full SINs in plain text.

Fraud: unsolicited calls or texts demanding your full SIN are almost always scams. The Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre and credit bureaus are part of a real-world response playbook this site only gestures at.

Training links: compare with T4 slips (boxes 16–18), Notice of Assessment (benefit eligibility), Employment Insurance (insurable hours), and RRSP & TFSA (RESP grants).

Never type a real SIN into classroom VMs that sync to the cloud.