Skip to main content

Is Long-Term Care Insurance Worth It in Canada? (2026)

Updated

The Core Problem Long-Term Care Insurance Solves

Canada’s public health system covers acute hospital and physician care. It does not cover the ongoing custodial care that most people eventually need: help bathing, dressing, eating, or managing medications at home or in a facility.

The cost of that care — privately paid — can rapidly deplete retirement savings:

Care settingAverage monthly cost (Canada, 2026)
Home care (part-time PSW support)$1,500–$3,500
Home care (full-time)$5,000–$10,000
Assisted living / retirement home$3,000–$7,000
Long-term care facility (private room)$4,000–$10,000+
Long-term care (subsidized provincial bed)$2,000–$3,500 (means tested, waitlisted)

A 3-year care need — roughly the average — costs $130,000–$360,000 in today’s dollars.

What Long-Term Care Insurance Actually Pays

Most Canadian LTC policies pay a daily or monthly indemnity benefit when you meet a disability trigger:

Trigger typeCommon threshold
Activities of Daily Living (ADLs)Unable to perform 2 of 6 ADLs: bathing, dressing, eating, toileting, transferring, continence
Cognitive impairmentAlzheimer’s, dementia — typically covered separately

Benefits are paid directly to you — you can use them for home care, facility costs, or anything else.

Typical policy features

FeatureCommon option
Daily benefit$100–$300/day
Elimination period (waiting period)0, 30, 60, or 90 days
Benefit period2 years, 5 years, or lifetime
Inflation protection3–5% compound or simple increase option
Return of premiumAvailable on some policies

Honest Look at the Costs

Age at purchaseApproximate monthly premium ($150/day, 90-day elimination, 5-year benefit period)
45$80–$150
50$120–$250
55$200–$380
60$300–$550
65$500–$800+

Total premiums paid by age 85 (assuming 40-year policy at 55): $96,000–$182,000

If you never claim, you recover nothing (unless you bought a return-of-premium rider, which significantly raises costs).

The Availability Problem in Canada

Unlike the US where LTC insurance is widely sold, most major Canadian insurers have withdrawn from the individual long-term care market due to low take-up, under-pricing in earlier decades, and challenging claim patterns:

InsurerLTC status
Sun LifeNo longer selling new individual LTC policies
Great-West Life / Canada LifeLimited products remain
ManulifeSome policies still available
RBC InsuranceExited individual market
Group plan coverageMore broadly available through employer benefits

If you want LTC insurance, the time to buy is before age 60 — after that, premiums escalate sharply and underwriting rejections increase.

Who Likely Benefits vs. Who Likely Doesn’t

Long-term care insurance is more likely worth it if:

SituationWhy it matters
You have assets of $300,000–$1.5 millionYou have something to protect but aren’t wealthy enough to self-insure
No family caregiver availableNo adult children or partner able to provide unpaid care
Family history of dementia or prolonged care needsStatistically higher risk
You value staying in your own homeLTC benefits can pay for home care that provincial programs don’t fully cover
Available through employer group benefitsGroup plans are often significantly cheaper

Long-term care insurance is less likely worth it if:

SituationWhy
Net worth over $3–4 millionCan reasonably self-insure the risk
Net worth under $200,000Benefits from government-subsidized care; premiums strain budget
Already over 70Premiums typically unaffordable; health underwriting difficult
Strong family caregiver networkReduces care cost significantly

Alternatives to Long-Term Care Insurance

Since individual LTC insurance is hard to get and expensive, Canadians often use these alternatives:

AlternativeHow it works
Critical illness insurancePays a lump sum on diagnosis — can be directed toward care costs
Whole life cash valueAccessible tax-advantaged cash if structured well
Self-insurance via investmentsTFSA, non-registered accounts earmarked for future care
Hybrid life + LTC policiesSome life insurance policies allow long-term care claims to accelerate death benefit (rare in Canada)
Home equityHELOC or reverse mortgage to fund care costs
Government-subsidized bedsWait times of 1–3 years in most provinces; income tested

Provincial Government Support: What You Can Expect

Provinces provide subsidized long-term care, but with important limitations:

ProvinceNotes
OntarioLHIN home care + LTC facility copay $2,000–$3,500/month (means tested)
British ColumbiaResidential care subsidy — assessed based on income
AlbertaAccommodation cap for continuing care facilities
QuebecCHSLD homes at subsidized rate ($1,800–$2,500/day for basic)

Provincial care is available but typically involves 1–3 year wait times for LTC beds, limited choice of facility, and shared rooms.

Bottom Line: Is It Worth It?

VerdictFor whom
Yes, if availableAges 50–60, moderate assets ($300K–$1.5M), purchased through employer group plan, family history of care needs
MaybeAges 55–65 buying individual policy — run the math on premiums vs. expected benefit at realistic care cost scenarios
Likely noUnder 45 (too far off, premiums add up), over 70 (very expensive), very high or very low net worth

The most practical takeaway for most Canadians: check your employer group benefits first. Group LTC insurance is often 30–50% cheaper and has simplified underwriting. If no employer coverage exists and you’re in your 50s with meaningful assets, the remaining individual market products deserve a look.

🏦

We use Wealthsimple for everyday banking. Get a $25 bonus when you open a free chequing account.

No monthly fees · 4% interest on deposits · Free e-Transfers · Takes 3 minutes

Get Your $25 Bonus →