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Car Insurance Saskatchewan (SGI) | Complete Guide 2026

Updated

Saskatchewan is one of three provinces where government-provided insurance is mandatory. SGI (Saskatchewan Government Insurance) administers the province’s public auto insurance through the Saskatchewan Auto Fund, which provides basic plate coverage attached to your vehicle registration. Unlike private provinces where you comparison-shop for mandatory coverage, your basic plate insurance is fixed — but there is still meaningful flexibility in how you structure your optional coverage, and private insurers compete for that business.

Saskatchewan operates SGI (Saskatchewan Government Insurance) as its public insurer. Compare this to private-market provinces in our car insurance by province guide or review car insurance across Canada.

For a national rate comparison, see car insurance by province across Canada.

How Saskatchewan Car Insurance Works

System Structure

ComponentProvider
Plate insurance (basic)SGI Auto Fund (mandatory)
Optional extensionSGI or private insurers
Injury claimsNo-fault (Auto Fund)
Vehicle registrationCombined with plate insurance

Plate Insurance vs Extension

Your SGI plate insurance attaches to your licence plate, not your vehicle — it follows the plate. When you register your vehicle, you automatically purchase plate insurance. Extension coverage, which covers your vehicle for collision and comprehensive damage, is optional and separate.

CoverageSource
Plate insuranceSGI only (comes with registration)
Owner’s certificateExtends liability beyond basic
Collision and upsetSGI or private insurer
ComprehensiveSGI or private insurer

What Plate Insurance Covers

Basic Auto Fund Coverage

CoverageDetails
Third-party liability$200,000 minimum
Accident benefitsNo-fault injury coverage
Uninsured motoristIncluded
Hit-and-run coverageIncluded
Property damage (limited)Included

Injury Benefits (No-Fault)

Saskatchewan’s no-fault injury benefits are handled through the Auto Fund regardless of who caused the accident. This means faster claims and lower legal costs — but you cannot sue the at-fault driver for general damages in most situations.

BenefitAmount
Medical and rehabilitationAs required
Income replacement90% of net income
Death and funeralLump sum benefits
Disability benefitsCovered

Average Costs in Saskatchewan

Saskatchewan has some of the lowest car insurance rates in western Canada. The public system controls costs better than fully private markets, and Saskatchewan’s lower population density means fewer claims overall.

Typical Annual Costs

CoverageAnnual Cost
Plate insurance only$700–$1,000
Plate + collision/comprehensive$1,000–$1,500
New driver (full coverage)$1,800–$2,800
High-risk driver$2,500–$4,000

By City

CityAverage Annual (Full Coverage)
Regina$1,100–$1,500
Saskatoon$1,100–$1,500
Prince Albert$1,000–$1,400
Moose Jaw$1,000–$1,400
Rural Saskatchewan$900–$1,300

Regina and Saskatoon have similar rates — both are mid-sized prairie cities with comparable risk profiles.

SGI Driver Safety Rating (DSR)

SGI uses a Driver Safety Rating scale from -4 to +15 to price premiums. New drivers start at 0, and each year without incidents moves you up the scale toward discounts. An at-fault crash or traffic violation moves you down, triggering surcharges.

DSR Scale

DSR LevelDescriptionRate Modifier
+15Maximum, best recordLowest premium
+10 to +14ExcellentSignificant discount
+5 to +9GoodModerate discount
0Neutral (new drivers)Base rate
-1 to -4Poor — surcharges applyHigher premiums

Events That Affect DSR

EventDSR Change
1 full year, no claims/violations+1
At-fault accident-4
Speeding ticket (major)-3
Distracted driving-3
Impaired driving-4

Extension Coverage Options

Optional coverage is where you can shop around. SGI offers extension through their own product, and private insurers compete for this business.

Available Extension Coverage

CoverageWhat It Covers
CollisionDamage to your car in an at-fault accident
ComprehensiveTheft, vandalism, hail, weather events
All perilsCombined collision and comprehensive
Specified perilsNamed events only (cheaper)
Owner’s certificateIncreases third-party liability above $200,000

Increasing Your Liability

The $200,000 minimum is often insufficient. A single serious injury claim can far exceed this amount.

Liability AmountAnnual Cost Increase
$500,000+$30–$60
$1,000,000+$60–$100
$2,000,000+$80–$120

How to Save on Saskatchewan Car Insurance

Key Savings Strategies

StrategyPotential Saving
Improve your DSR over time20–40% discount vs new driver
Raise collision deductible$100–$300/year
Drop collision on older vehicles$300–$600/year
Drive fewer kilometresMinor reduction
Winter tiresDiscount from some private insurers
Multi-vehicle discount5–15%
Bundle home and auto5–15%

When to Drop Collision

A common rule of thumb: if your vehicle is worth less than 10 times your annual collision premium, dropping collision may make more financial sense than paying for coverage.

Vehicle ValueCollision PremiumRecommendation
Under $5,000$500+/yearConsider dropping
$5,000–$10,000$400/yearBorderline
Over $10,000$400/yearKeep it

Saskatchewan vs Other Provinces

ProvinceSystemAverage Annual
OntarioPrivate$1,900–$2,400
AlbertaPrivate (regulated)$1,400–$1,900
ManitobaMPI (public)$1,200–$2,000
SaskatchewanSGI (public)$1,000–$1,500
New BrunswickPrivate$1,000–$1,300
Nova ScotiaPrivate$1,100–$1,500
QuebecHybrid$900–$1,400

Saskatchewan is among the most affordable provinces for car insurance, making it attractive for drivers frustrated with Ontario or BC rates.

Filing a Claim with SGI

Claim Process

StepAction
1Call SGI at 1-800-667-8015 or visit an SGI office
2File a police report if required (theft, hit-and-run, injury)
3Take vehicle to an SGI-approved repair facility
4SGI assesses damage and authorizes repairs
5Pay your deductible to the repair shop

Injury Claims

Injury claims are handled through the no-fault Auto Fund. File within 30 days of the accident and contact SGI’s accident benefits team for income replacement, medical, and rehabilitation support.