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Insurance Deductibles Explained: How They Work in Canada

Updated

Your deductible is one of the most important choices you make when buying insurance. It directly affects how much you pay in premiums and how much you pay out of pocket when you make a claim.

How deductibles work

When you file an insurance claim, you pay the deductible amount first. Your insurer pays the rest up to your coverage limit.

Example: $1,000 deductible

Claim AmountYou PayInsurer Pays
$500$500 (below deductible — no claim)$0
$1,000$1,000$0
$3,000$1,000$2,000
$10,000$1,000$9,000
$50,000$1,000$49,000

Key point: If your damage is less than your deductible, there is no point filing a claim. You pay the full cost yourself.

Deductibles by insurance type

Car insurance deductibles

CoverageCommon DeductiblesStandard
Collision$300, $500, $1,000, $1,500, $2,000$500
Comprehensive$0, $100, $200, $300, $500$300
LiabilityNo deductible (coverage applies from $0)N/A
Accident benefitsNo deductibleN/A

In most provinces, collision and comprehensive have separate deductibles. You can choose different amounts for each.

Home insurance deductibles

TypeCommon DeductiblesStandard
Standard perils$500, $1,000, $2,500, $5,000$1,000
Water/sewer backup$1,000, $2,500, $5,000, $10,000$2,500
Earthquake (BC)5-15% of coverage amount5%
Overland flood$1,000, $2,500, $5,000$2,500

Note: Water-related deductibles have increased significantly in recent years due to rising claims. Some insurers now have $5,000-10,000 water damage deductibles.

Condo insurance deductibles

Your PolicyCommon Deductibles
Your personal condo policy$500-1,000
Condo corporation master policy$10,000-250,000+

The condo corporation’s deductible is important because loss assessment rules may mean you are charged for it if damage originates from your unit.

Other insurance deductibles

Insurance TypeTypical Deductible
Pet insurance$200-500 (annual)
Travel insurance$0-250
Life insuranceNo deductible
Disability insuranceWaiting period (30-180 days) instead of $ deductible
Critical illness insuranceWaiting period (30 days) instead of $ deductible

How your deductible affects your premiums

Car insurance (collision)

DeductibleAnnual Premium (approx.)Savings vs $500
$300$1,200-$100 (costs more)
$500$1,100Baseline
$1,000$960Save $140/year
$1,500$890Save $210/year
$2,000$840Save $260/year

Home insurance

DeductibleAnnual Premium (approx.)Savings vs $1,000
$500$1,600-$200 (costs more)
$1,000$1,400Baseline
$2,500$1,150Save $250/year
$5,000$1,000Save $400/year

Choosing the right deductible

The decision framework

FactorChoose Lower DeductibleChoose Higher Deductible
Emergency fundSmall or none$5,000+ saved
Claims frequencyYou tend to file claimsYou rarely file claims
Risk tolerancePrefer predictabilityComfortable with occasional large costs
Cash flowTight monthly budgetCan absorb unexpected expenses
Vehicle valueNew/expensive vehicleOlder vehicle with lower value

Break-even analysis

The key question: how many years of premium savings does it take to offset the higher deductible?

Example: Switching car insurance from $500 to $1,000 deductible

Extra deductible risk$500 more per claim
Annual premium savings$140/year
Break-even3.6 years without a claim

If you go more than 3.6 years without a collision claim (most drivers do), the higher deductible saves money over time.

When NOT to increase your deductible

  • You do not have an emergency fund to cover the deductible
  • You live in a high-risk area for claims (hail, floods, high theft)
  • You have a history of frequent claims
  • The premium savings are minimal relative to the extra risk

Common deductible mistakes

  1. Choosing a deductible you cannot afford — if you cannot pay $2,000 out of pocket after an accident, a $2,000 deductible is too high
  2. Filing small claims just above your deductible — a $1,200 claim on a $1,000 deductible nets you only $200 but may increase your premiums for years
  3. Forgetting about separate deductibles — your home policy may have different deductibles for water, wind, and standard perils
  4. Not reviewing after life changes — if your financial situation improves, increasing your deductible can save money annually
  5. Assuming the deductible is per year — car insurance deductibles are per claim, not per year (though pet insurance deductibles are typically annual)

Deductible strategy: emergency fund alignment

The optimal deductible depends on your emergency fund:

Emergency fundRecommended deductible
Less than $500$500 (minimum)
$500–$1,000$500–$1,000
$1,000–$2,500$1,000–$2,000
$2,500–$5,000$2,000–$5,000
$5,000+$2,000–$5,000 (premium savings plateau)

Raising your deductible from $500 to $2,000 typically saves 10–20% on home or auto premiums. On a $1,800/year auto premium, that’’s $180–$360/year in savings. You break even within 4–8 years if you make no claims — and claim-free discounts further reward the lower-claim approach.

Frequently asked questions

Should I file a claim for minor damage? Calculate the break-even: if the repair costs $1,800 and your deductible is $500, you’’d receive $1,300 from insurance. But if your premium increases $300/year for 5 years following the at-fault claim, you pay $1,500 in extra premiums — more than the $1,300 benefit. For claims under $1,500–$2,000, paying out of pocket often saves money over 3–5 years.

Do deductibles apply to liability claims? No — liability deductibles are uncommon. If a guest is injured in your home and sues you, your home insurance liability coverage (typically $1–2M) pays the settlement with no deductible. Deductibles typically apply to property damage coverage (collision, comprehensive for auto; contents and dwelling for home).


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