Life insurance replaces your income when you die so your family can maintain their standard of living. In Canada, where the average mortgage is over $300,000 and the cost of raising a child exceeds $250,000, having adequate coverage is essential for anyone with dependents.
Types of life insurance in Canada
| Type | Duration | Cash Value | Best For | Relative Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Term life | 10, 20, or 30 years | No | Most families, income replacement | $ |
| Whole life | Lifetime | Yes (guaranteed) | Estate planning, permanent needs | $$$$$ |
| Universal life | Lifetime | Yes (investment-based) | Tax-sheltered investing + insurance | $$$$ |
| Term-100 | To age 100 | No | Permanent coverage without cash value | $$$ |
Term life insurance
The most popular and cost-effective type. You pay a fixed premium for a set term (10, 20, or 30 years). If you die during the term, your beneficiary receives the death benefit tax-free. If you survive the term, the policy expires.
Best for: Young families needing maximum coverage at the lowest cost. A healthy 35-year-old can get $500,000 of 20-year term coverage for $30-50/month.
Whole life insurance
Covers you for your entire life as long as premiums are paid. Part of your premium builds a guaranteed cash value that grows tax-deferred. You can borrow against the cash value or surrender the policy for its cash value.
Best for: Estate planning, covering final expenses, leaving a guaranteed inheritance, or funding a buy-sell agreement for business owners.
Universal life insurance
Combines lifetime coverage with a tax-sheltered investment account. You choose how the cash value is invested (GICs, index funds, etc.). More flexible but more complex than whole life.
Best for: High-income earners who have maxed out RRSP and TFSA room and want additional tax-sheltered growth.
How much life insurance do you need?
Needs analysis approach
| Need | How to Calculate |
|---|---|
| Income replacement | Annual income × years until youngest child is independent |
| Mortgage payoff | Remaining mortgage balance |
| Other debts | Car loans, lines of credit, student loans |
| Children’s education | $50,000-100,000 per child for university |
| Final expenses | $10,000-15,000 for funeral and estate costs |
| Subtract existing resources | Savings, investments, employer group coverage, CPP survivor benefits |
Quick estimate by life stage
| Life Stage | Suggested Coverage |
|---|---|
| Single, no dependents | Enough to cover debts + final expenses ($50,000-100,000) |
| Married, no kids | 10x income or enough to pay off mortgage + debts |
| Young family (kids under 10) | 12-15x income (peak coverage need) |
| Established family (kids 10-18) | 10-12x income |
| Empty nesters | 5-8x income (declining need) |
| Retired | Typically not needed unless estate planning |
How much life insurance costs in Canada
Term life insurance monthly premiums (20-year term, $500,000 coverage, non-smoker)
| Age | Male | Female |
|---|---|---|
| 25 | $22-30 | $18-25 |
| 30 | $25-35 | $20-28 |
| 35 | $30-45 | $25-35 |
| 40 | $45-65 | $35-50 |
| 45 | $70-100 | $55-80 |
| 50 | $110-160 | $85-120 |
Smokers pay 2-3x these rates. Premiums are locked in for the full 20-year term.
What affects your life insurance rates
| Factor | Impact |
|---|---|
| Age | Older = more expensive (buy young to lock in low rates) |
| Health | Pre-existing conditions increase rates or may require a rated policy |
| Smoking | Smokers pay 2-3x more than non-smokers |
| Gender | Males pay 10-30% more than females (higher mortality rates) |
| Coverage amount | Higher coverage = higher premiums |
| Term length | Longer terms cost more (30-year > 20-year > 10-year) |
| Occupation | High-risk occupations (mining, aviation) may pay more |
| Family health history | Cancer, heart disease in immediate family can increase rates |
How to buy life insurance in Canada
Application process
- Determine your coverage needs — use the needs analysis table above
- Compare quotes — use online quote tools from multiple insurers
- Apply — complete a detailed application about your health, lifestyle, and finances
- Medical underwriting — most policies require a medical exam (blood test, urine, blood pressure) for coverage over $500,000; many companies offer no-exam options up to $500,000-1,000,000
- Policy issued — typically 4-8 weeks from application to approval
- Pay premiums — monthly or annual payments begin
No-medical-exam options
Many Canadian insurers now offer simplified or no-exam policies:
| Type | Max Coverage | Medical Requirements | Premiums |
|---|---|---|---|
| No-exam term | Up to $1,000,000 | Health questionnaire only | 10-20% higher |
| Simplified issue | Up to $500,000 | Short questionnaire, no exam | 20-40% higher |
| Guaranteed issue | Up to $25,000 | No health questions | Significantly higher |
Employer group life insurance
Many Canadian employers provide group life insurance (typically 1-2x salary). While valuable, employer coverage has limitations:
- Not portable — you lose it when you leave your job
- Usually insufficient — 1-2x salary is far below what most families need
- May not be convertible — not all group policies can be converted to individual policies
- Taxable — employer-paid premiums may create a taxable benefit
Recommendation: Treat employer coverage as a bonus, not your primary life insurance. Own an individual policy that you control regardless of employment.
Life insurance and taxes in Canada
| Scenario | Tax Treatment |
|---|---|
| Death benefit paid to beneficiary | Tax-free |
| Premiums you pay | Not tax-deductible (personal policies) |
| Cash value growth (whole/universal) | Tax-deferred until withdrawn |
| Surrendering a policy for cash value | Taxable on the gain above your adjusted cost basis |
| Corporate-owned life insurance | Complex rules — consult a tax advisor |
Common mistakes to avoid
- Buying only employer coverage — it disappears when you leave your job
- Choosing whole life when term is sufficient — overpaying 5-15x for coverage you do not need permanently
- Underinsuring — $100,000 may sound like a lot but covers only a few years of expenses
- Waiting too long to buy — premiums increase significantly with age, and health issues can make you uninsurable
- Not naming a beneficiary — without a named beneficiary, proceeds go through your estate (delays, fees, potential taxes)
- Letting a policy lapse — if your term expires and you still need coverage, renewal rates are dramatically higher
Related Reading
- Pet Insurance in Canada: Complete Guide for 2026
- Disability Insurance in Canada: Complete Guide for 2026
- Car Insurance in Canada: Complete Guide for 2026
- What Happens to Your Mortgage When You Die in Canada — How life insurance protects your family’s home
- Mortgage Life Insurance vs Term Life — Which policy type covers your mortgage better
→ Back to: Canadian Insurance Guide