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Health Insurance in Canada: What Is and Isn't Covered (2026)

Updated

Canada’s public health system covers the basics, but there are significant gaps. Here’s what’s covered, what isn’t, and how to fill those gaps with supplemental insurance.

What Provincial Health Insurance Covers

ServiceCovered?Notes
Doctor visits (GP and specialist)✅ YesReferral may be needed for specialist
Hospital stays✅ YesWard room only (shared room)
Surgery (medically necessary)✅ YesIncluding day surgery
Emergency room visits✅ YesNo charge for treatment
Diagnostic tests (blood work, X-rays, CT, MRI)✅ YesWhen ordered by a doctor
Maternity and newborn care✅ YesHospital delivery, midwife care
Mental health (psychiatrist)✅ YesPsychiatrists are medical doctors
Immunizations (routine)✅ YesVaries by province — most childhood vaccines covered
Cancer treatment (chemo, radiation)✅ YesHospital-administered
Ambulance services⚠️ Partial$45–$850 depending on province; some charge a co-pay

What Provincial Health Insurance Does NOT Cover

ServiceCovered?Typical Cost (Out of Pocket)
Prescription drugs (outside hospital)$50–$500+/month depending on medication
Dental care$200–$600/year for basic; $1,000+ for major work
Eye exams (adults 20–64 in most provinces)$75–$150/exam
Glasses and contact lenses$200–$800/pair
Physiotherapy❌ (mostly)$70–$120/session
Massage therapy$80–$130/session
Chiropractic❌ (mostly)$50–$100/session
Psychology / therapy$150–$250/session
Private / semi-private hospital room$200–$400/night
Hearing aids❌ (mostly)$1,000–$6,000/pair
Orthotics and medical devices❌ (mostly)$300–$600/pair
Cosmetic surgeryVaries widely
Fertility treatments (IVF)⚠️ Some provinces$10,000–$15,000/cycle (Ontario covers 1 cycle)
Travel medical insuranceMust purchase separately

Provincial Health Plans at a Glance

ProvincePlan NameMonthly PremiumWaiting Period (New Residents)Drug Coverage
OntarioOHIP$03 monthsOHIP+ (under 25), Trillium (low-income)
BCMSP$0None (eliminated 2020)Fair PharmaCare (income-based)
AlbertaAHCIP$03 monthsSeniors, social assistance
QuebecRAMQ$0–$731/year (via tax)3 monthsRAMQ mandatory drug plan
ManitobaManitoba Health$03 monthsPharmacare (income-based)
SaskatchewanSaskatchewan Health$03 monthsDrug Plan (seniors, low-income)
New BrunswickMedicare$03 monthsDrug Plan (seniors, low-income)
Nova ScotiaMSI$03 monthsPharmacare (income-based)
PEIHealth PEI$03 monthsDrug Programs (various)
NewfoundlandMCP$03 monthsNLPDP (income-based)

Supplemental Health Insurance: What It Covers

Coverage CategoryWhat’s IncludedTypical Annual Maximum
Prescription drugsMedications not covered by provincial plan, including brand-name and generic$5,000–$25,000 (or 80% co-pay)
Paramedical / practitionersPhysiotherapy, massage, chiropractic, naturopath, acupuncture, osteopath$500–$1,000 per practitioner
Psychology / mental healthPsychologist, social worker, psychotherapist$500–$2,000/year
VisionEye exams, glasses, contact lenses, laser surgery (some plans)$200–$500 every 2 years
DentalCleanings, fillings, crowns, orthodontics (usually separate plan)$750–$2,500/year
HospitalSemi-private or private room upgradeUnlimited (room differential)
Medical equipmentHearing aids, orthotics, braces, crutches, wheelchairs$500–$3,000 per item
Travel medicalEmergency medical while travelling outside province/country$1M–$5M per trip
AmbulanceGround and air ambulance co-paysFull coverage of provincial gap

Best Individual Health Insurance Plans in Canada

ProviderMonthly Cost (Single, Age 30)Prescription CoverageParamedicalVisionBest For
Manulife Flexcare$80–$200✅ 80% up to $10K✅ $500–$1,000/practitioner✅ $200/2yrCustomizable tiers
Sun Life$90–$220✅ 80% up to $15K✅ $500–$1,000✅ $200/2yrComprehensive coverage
Canada Life (GWL)$85–$210✅ 80% up to $10K✅ $500–$750✅ $200/2yrBroad provider network
Blue Cross$70–$180✅ 70–80%✅ $300–$750✅ $150–$200/2yrProvincial plans, budget-friendly
Green Shield$80–$190✅ 80% up to $10K✅ $500–$1,000✅ $200/2yrDigital experience
Desjardins$75–$180✅ 80%✅ $500–$750✅ $200/2yrQuebec residents
SSQ Insurance$65–$150✅ 70–80%✅ $300–$500✅ $150/2yrBudget option

Costs increase significantly with age. A 50-year-old may pay 2–3x these rates.

Employer Group Plans vs Individual Plans

FactorEmployer Group PlanIndividual Plan
Monthly cost to you$0–$50 (employer subsidizes)$80–$300
Prescription coverage80–100%, high maximums70–80%, lower maximums
Paramedical limits$500–$2,000/practitioner$300–$1,000/practitioner
Medical underwritingNone (guaranteed issue)May be required (health questions)
Pre-existing conditionsCovered from day oneMay be excluded for 1–2 years
PortabilityLose it when you leave employerYou own it — keep it forever
Tax treatmentEmployer premiums are a taxable benefit (except in Quebec)Not tax-deductible (except self-employed)
Conversion optionCan convert to individual plan when leaving (within 31–60 days)N/A

Health Spending Account (HSA)

FeatureDetails
What it isEmployer-funded account for medical expenses
Tax treatmentTax-free to employee, tax-deductible for employer
What it coversAny CRA-eligible medical expense (dental, vision, prescriptions, paramedical, orthotics, etc.)
Annual amountSet by employer (typically $500–$5,000/year)
Carry-forwardSome plans allow unused balance to carry forward 1 year
Who offers itSmall businesses instead of or alongside group insurance
Best forFlexible coverage for employees with varying health needs

Coverage During Provincial Waiting Period

OptionCostCoverageDuration
Private interim health plan (Blue Cross, Manulife)$100–$300/monthEmergency medical, prescriptions, hospital1–3 months
Travel medical insurance$3–$10/dayEmergency only (no prescriptions or paramedical)1–3 months
University/college student planIncluded in tuitionExtended health, dental, visionAcademic year
Employer group plan$0 (starts on hire date)Full extended healthMay start before provincial coverage

When You Don’t Need Supplemental Insurance

SituationWhy You May Skip It
Healthy with no prescriptionsProvincial plan covers doctor visits and hospital
Low incomeProvincial drug programs cover medications
Under 25 in OntarioOHIP+ covers most prescriptions
Senior with provincial drug coverageMost provinces have senior drug programs
Rarely use paramedical servicesPaying out-of-pocket may be cheaper than premiums
CDCP covers your dentalNo need for separate dental insurance

When You Definitely Need Supplemental Insurance

SituationWhy
Take expensive prescription medicationsProvincial plans cover very few drugs for working-age adults
Regular physiotherapy, massage, or chiropractic$70–$130/session adds up fast
Need psychology/therapy sessions$150–$250/session, often needed weekly
Family with children (dental, vision, orthotics)Kids need dental, glasses, and regular care
Self-employedNo employer plan — you must cover everything yourself
Between jobsGroup plan ends on last day of employment (or end of month)
Travelling outside CanadaProvincial plans cover little or nothing abroad