Canada Protection Plan fills a real gap in the Canadian life insurance market — providing coverage to people that most underwriters won’t touch. But you’ll pay a significant premium for that flexibility.
Canada Protection Plan at a glance
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Specialization | No-medical and simplified issue life insurance |
| Underwriter | Foresters Life Insurance Company |
| Backing | Foresters Financial (mutual; ~$14B assets; since 1874) |
| Distribution | Through independent brokers only (not direct) |
| Province availability | All provinces and territories |
| Age range | 18–80 (varies by product) |
| Policyholder protection | Assuris-covered |
| Maximum coverage | ~$350,000 (simplified); ~$50,000 (guaranteed) |
Product comparison
| Product | Health questions? | Medical exam? | Max coverage | Graded period | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Simplified Elite | Yes (3–10 questions) | No | ~$350,000 | None (full coverage day 1) | Controlled health conditions; fastest no-exam option |
| Simplified Issue | Yes (more questions) | No | ~$350,000 | None (full coverage day 1) | More complex health history; lenient underwriting |
| Guaranteed Issue | No questions | No | ~$50,000 | 2 years (return of premium only) | Truly uninsurable; final expense only |
| Term Life (simplified) | Yes (short questionnaire) | No | ~$1,000,000 | None | Temporary coverage without full exam |
Pricing vs conventional underwritten life insurance
$250,000 permanent life insurance, male, age 55:
| Product type | Monthly premium (approx.) |
|---|---|
| Conventional whole life (standard, with medical exam) | ~$400–$500 |
| CPP Simplified Elite | ~$600–$750 |
| CPP Guaranteed Issue ($50K only) | ~$175–$225 (for far less coverage) |
$100,000 term life (20 years), female, age 45:
| Product type | Monthly premium (approx.) |
|---|---|
| Conventional term (standard, with medical exam) | ~$38–$45 |
| Conventional term (standard, policyme no-exam) | ~$42–$50 |
| CPP Simplified Elite term | ~$65–$85 |
| CPP Guaranteed Issue (max $50K) | Not applicable for $100K |
The no-medical premium is typically 40–80% higher than a conventional fully underwritten policy for comparable coverage.
How CPP compares to other no-medical providers
| Feature | CPP | Assumption Life | Industrial Alliance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Max simplified coverage | ~$350,000 | ~$300,000 | ~$500,000 (select products) |
| Guaranteed issue max | ~$50,000 | ~$25,000 | ~$25,000 |
| Graded benefit (GI) | 2 years | 2 years | 2 years |
| Financial backing | Foresters (mutual) | Assumption (mutual) | iA Financial (public) |
| Distribution | Broker only | Broker only | Broker only |
No-medical insurers should always be compared through a broker — pricing and eligibility vary enough that a direct comparison is necessary.
The graded benefit: what it means in practice
For Guaranteed Issue policies:
| Death in year | Beneficiary receives |
|---|---|
| Year 1 | Return of premiums paid + 10% interest |
| Year 2 | Return of premiums paid + 10% interest |
| Year 3+ | Full death benefit ($5,000–$50,000) |
This matters: If you purchase a $40,000 CPP Guaranteed Issue policy and pay premiums for 18 months before dying, your beneficiary receives approximately $18,000–$20,000 (the premiums paid plus 10% interest) — not $40,000.
Guaranteed issue life insurance is an emergency option for Canadians who genuinely cannot qualify for anything else. It is not a savings vehicle or efficient legacy planning tool.
When CPP is the right answer
CPP (or another no-medical insurer) is appropriate when:
- You have been formally declined by at least one conventional underwriter
- You have Type 1 diabetes, metastatic cancer (in remission), COPD, HIV, or another condition that traditionally triggers automatic declines
- You are over 70 and want small final-expense coverage ($10,000–$25,000) without a medical exam
- You are between conventional insurers and need a bridge policy quickly
- Your medications or recent medical procedures make traditional underwriting uncertain
CPP is not appropriate when:
- You are healthy and would qualify for conventional underwritten insurance
- You could accept a rated (more expensive) conventional policy that still provides better value than no-medical
- You need more than $350,000 in coverage — CPP cannot help above this
Verdict
Canada Protection Plan is a legitimate, financially backed solution for Canadians who cannot obtain conventional life insurance. For its target market — people with serious health histories, seniors wanting final expense coverage, and those who have faced previous declines — CPP provides genuine access to coverage that would otherwise be unavailable.
For everyone else, the 40–80% premium surcharge vs. conventional underwritten insurance makes CPP a poor choice. Always pursue a conventional underwritten policy first. Only turn to no-medical insurers when conventional underwriting fails.
Canada Protection Plan products overview
CPP (not to be confused with the Canada Pension Plan) offers several simplified/guaranteed issue life insurance products:
| Product | Coverage | Medical exam | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Simplified Elite Term | $50K–$500K | No (health questions) | Healthier applicants needing fast coverage |
| Simplified Elite Whole Life | $10K–$500K | No (health questions) | Permanent coverage without exam |
| Deferred Life | $10K–$150K | No exam, no health questions | Uninsurable individuals |
| Guaranteed Acceptance | $5K–$25K | None | Funeral/final expense coverage |
Deferred Life plans have a 2-year waiting period — if the insured dies in the first 2 years (of natural causes), only premiums paid are returned. Accidental death is covered from day 1.
How CPP rates compare to standard term insurance
For a healthy applicant, standard term insurance (requiring a medical exam or simplified underwriting) will almost always cost less than CPP’’s no-medical products. CPP’’s premium for a 55-year-old non-smoker for $100,000 of simplified whole life might be $250–$350/month — versus $80–$120/month for a conventional whole life policy with medical underwriting.
The premium differential reflects the higher risk pool of applicants who choose no-medical products (those who know they might not pass standard underwriting).
Frequently asked questions
Is Canada Protection Plan legitimate? Yes — Canada Protection Plan is a brand of Foresters Life Insurance Company (formerly Knights of Columbus Insurance). Foresters is a federally regulated life insurance company in Canada, a mutual benefit society, and one of the largest providers of simplified issue life insurance in North America.
Is no-medical life insurance worth it? For people who genuinely cannot qualify for standard life insurance (recent cancer treatment, heart disease, poorly controlled diabetes), no-medical insurance provides coverage that would otherwise be unavailable. For healthy applicants who simply want to avoid the exam inconvenience, the significant premium premium makes standard insurance the better financial choice.