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Home Insurance Toronto | Average Rates & Best Companies (2026)

Updated

Toronto home insurance is among the most expensive in Canada — though not as extreme as the Alberta hail belt. The Greater Toronto Area’s high property values, aging Victorian-era housing stock in many neighbourhoods, and history of severe urban flooding make it a challenging market. Understanding what drives your premium — and what you can do about it — is essential for Toronto homeowners.

Toronto home insurance is driven by property values and density. Compare to Ontario home insurance and the national home insurance average.

Average Home Insurance Costs in Toronto

By Neighbourhood Type

Neighbourhood CategoryAverage Annual
Central Toronto (Annex, Danforth, Leslieville)$1,700–$2,500
North Toronto / Rosedale / Forest Hill$2,000–$3,000+
Scarborough$1,500–$2,200
Etobicoke$1,500–$2,200
North York$1,600–$2,300
East York$1,600–$2,200
Downtown condo (unit policy)$400–$750
Toronto average (detached)$1,500–$2,200

High-value neighbourhoods like Rosedale, Forest Hill, and Lawrence Park pay the most — not because of higher risk, but because their very high rebuild costs require much higher dwelling coverage limits.

By Property Type

Property TypeAverage Annual
Detached house (average)$1,500–$2,200
Semi-detached$1,200–$1,800
Townhouse (freehold)$1,000–$1,500
Condo unit (unit policy)$400–$750
Victorian / older home$1,800–$2,800
New construction$1,000–$1,500

What Drives Toronto Home Insurance Costs

High Rebuild Costs

Toronto’s construction costs are among Canada’s highest. Rebuild cost per square foot for a typical Toronto home runs $250–$400+, significantly above smaller cities. Your dwelling coverage limit should reflect rebuild cost — not market value.

If your home’s market value is $1.2M but rebuilding it would cost $600K, your dwelling coverage should be $600K. Overinsuring (or underinsuring) both cost you money.

Aging Housing Stock

Toronto has a massive inventory of homes built between 1880 and 1960 that carry significant insurance challenges:

Older Home RiskInsurance Impact
Knob-and-tube wiringSurcharge or refusal to insure
Aluminum wiring (1960s–70s)Surcharge; often requires ESA certificate
Galvanized steel plumbingSurcharge; may require replacement
Clay sewer lateralsHigher sewer backup risk/premium
Older foundation (stone/brick)Water intrusion risk surcharge

Getting an updated home inspection before shopping for insurance — and upgrading wiring or plumbing proactively — can save thousands over the life of your policy.

Urban Flooding

The 2013 Toronto flood (over $940 million in insured losses) demonstrated that basement flooding is Toronto’s most frequent and costly home insurance claim type. The city has aging combined sewer systems that overflow during heavy rain, and many Toronto neighbourhoods sit over the Don or Humber floodplains.

Flood TypeStandardAdd-On
Overland floodingNOOverland flood endorsement
Sewer backupNOSewer backup endorsement
Burst pipeYESN/A
Foundation seepageNO — gradualN/A

Both overland flood and sewer backup endorsements are recommended for virtually every Toronto homeowner.

What Standard Coverage Includes

CoverageDetails
DwellingFire, windstorm, theft, vandalism, pipe damage
Personal propertyContents
Liability$1–$2M standard; higher available
Additional living expensesHotel and meals if displaced
Detached structuresGarage, garden suite, fence

Best Home Insurance Companies in Toronto

InsurerNotes
Intact InsuranceLarge Ontario market share
TD InsuranceCompetitive, multi-product discounts
DesjardinsStrong Ontario/Quebec presence
AvivaMajor Toronto market presence
The Co-operatorsGood condo and tenant options
Economical (Definity)Broker-distributed
Sonnet InsuranceOnline-first, often competitive
PolicyMeOnline comparison, competitive
CAA InsuranceMember savings for Toronto homeowners
WawanesaGrowing Ontario presence

Online-first insurers (Sonnet, PolicyMe) can sometimes offer meaningfully lower premiums than traditional brokers for straightforward newer homes. For older homes with complications, working with a broker who can access specialty markets is worth the effort.

How to Save on Toronto Home Insurance

StrategySavings
Bundle home and auto10–25%
Increase deductible to $2,000–$5,00015–25%
Upgrade knob-and-tube wiring15–30% (or allows coverage at all)
Install sump pump with backup5–15%
Monitored alarm system5–15%
New roof within 10 years5–15%
Updated plumbing5–15%
Claims-free loyalty5–10%
Backwater valve installedRequired by some insurers
Pay annually2–5%

Toronto-Specific Tip: Backwater Valve

Many Toronto insurers now require a backwater valve (also called a flood valve or sewer backup prevention valve) for sewer backup coverage in older homes. The City of Toronto offers a subsidy program for backwater valve installation. This valve prevents sewer water from flowing back into your basement during heavy rain events.

Condo Insurance in Toronto

Toronto is Canada’s largest condo market. Condo unit owners need two types of coverage:

Coverage TypeWho Has It
Building / common areasCondo corporation’s policy
Your unit improvementsYour own policy
Your contentsYour own policy
Your liabilityYour own policy
Loss assessmentAdd-on to your policy

Always obtain a copy of your condo corporation’s insurance certificate to understand the deductible the corporation carries. If there’s a $25,000 deductible on the building policy and the damage is in your unit, you may be on the hook for up to $25,000 — loss assessment coverage protects against this.