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Home Renovations That Lower Your Insurance Premiums in Canada (2026)

Updated

Home insurance premiums in Canada have risen sharply — up 30%–60% in many provinces since 2020 due to climate-related claims, inflation in building materials, and increased water damage frequency. While you cannot control insurance market trends, you can lower your premium by reducing your home’s risk profile through targeted upgrades. Insurers price risk: remove the risk factors, and your premium drops.

Upgrades That Lower Insurance Premiums

Tier 1: Highest Impact

UpgradeTypical CostInsurance SavingsPayback from Insurance Alone
Roof replacement (to modern shingles/metal)$8,000–$20,0005%–15% ($100–$375/yr)Long (but roof also prevents claims)
Electrical rewiring (remove knob-and-tube)$8,000–$20,00010%–25% ($200–$625/yr)Long (some insurers won’t cover K&T at all)
Electrical rewiring (remove aluminum wiring)$6,000–$15,00010%–20% ($200–$500/yr)Long
Plumbing replacement (remove galvanized/poly-B)$5,000–$15,00010%–20% ($200–$500/yr)Long

These upgrades address the risk factors insurers care about most: fire (wiring), water damage (plumbing), and weather damage (roof). Some insurers will refuse coverage entirely for homes with knob-and-tube wiring or severely aged roofs.

Tier 2: Moderate Impact

UpgradeTypical CostInsurance SavingsNotes
Monitored security system$200–$500 + $20–$50/month5%–15% ($100–$375/yr)Must be professionally monitored, not just self-monitored
Sump pump with battery backup$1,500–$4,000 (installed)5%–10% ($100–$250/yr)Critical in flood-prone areas and basements
Backwater valve$2,000–$5,000 (installed)5%–10% ($100–$250/yr)Prevents sewer backup — a leading claim type
Water leak detection system$200–$1,0003%–8% ($60–$200/yr)Smart sensors that shut off water on leak detection
Updated furnace/HVAC$4,000–$10,0003%–8% ($60–$200/yr)Modern systems are lower fire risk

Tier 3: Incremental Savings

UpgradeTypical CostInsurance SavingsNotes
Smoke and CO detectors (hardwired)$300–$8001%–3%Many insurers require these as baseline
Fire extinguishers (multiple)$100–$3001%–2%Minor discount but good practice
Impact-resistant windows$15,000–$35,0002%–5%More relevant in hail-prone regions (Alberta, Prairies)
Deadbolt locks on all exterior doors$200–$5001%–3%Basic security requirement
Fireplace/chimney update$500–$3,000 (inspection + repair)1%–5%Old wood-burning fireplaces are a risk factor

How Insurers Assess Your Home

Insurers look at your home’s risk profile across several categories:

Risk CategoryWhat Insurers CheckHigher Risk (Higher Premiums)Lower Risk (Lower Premiums)
RoofAge, material, condition20+ year old asphalt shinglesMetal or new asphalt (<10 years)
ElectricalWiring type, panel ageKnob-and-tube, aluminum, fuse panelCopper wiring, modern breaker panel
PlumbingPipe material, ageGalvanized steel, polybutylene (Poly-B)Copper or PEX
HeatingSystem type, ageOld oil furnace, wood-only heatingModern gas furnace or heat pump
Water protectionSump pump, backwater valveNo sump pump in basementSump pump with battery backup + backwater valve
SecurityLocks, alarm systemNo alarm, basic locksMonitored alarm, deadbolts, cameras
Claims historyPast claims at addressMultiple water or fire claimsClaim-free for 5+ years
LocationFlood zone, wildfire riskHigh-risk zoneLow-risk area

Provincial Considerations

Insurance costs and risk factors vary significantly by province:

ProvinceAverage Annual Premium (2026)Top Risk FactorMost Impactful Upgrade
Ontario$1,800–$2,500Water damage (sewer backup, flooding)Backwater valve + sump pump
British Columbia$1,500–$2,200Earthquake and waterEarthquake retrofitting (if applicable)
Alberta$1,800–$3,000Hail and severe weatherImpact-resistant roofing/windows
Quebec$1,200–$1,800Water damageSump pump + leak detection
Atlantic provinces$1,000–$1,600Wind and waterRoof upgrade + water protection
Manitoba/Saskatchewan$1,200–$2,000Severe weatherRoof + backwater valve

Water Damage: Canada’s #1 Insurance Claim

Water damage now accounts for roughly 50% of all home insurance claims in Canada. Insurers have responded with higher premiums and deductibles specifically for water-related claims. Upgrades targeting water are the most effective premium reducers.

Water Protection Checklist

ProtectionCostPremium ImpactClaim Prevention Value
Sump pump$800–$2,0003%–5%Prevents basement flooding from groundwater
Battery backup sump pump$500–$1,500 (add-on)Additional 2%–5%Works during power outages (when flooding is most likely)
Backwater valve$2,000–$5,0005%–10%Prevents sewer backup into basement
Water leak detection (smart)$200–$1,0003%–8%Alerts to leaks and can auto-shut water
Automatic water shutoff valve$500–$1,500Included in leak detection discountShuts water supply when leak detected
Proper grading and drainage$1,000–$5,000IndirectDirects water away from foundation

Total water protection package: $5,000–$15,000 installed, with potential premium savings of 10%–20% annually.

How to Maximize Your Insurance Savings

StepAction
1Get an insurance review — ask your broker what specific upgrades would reduce your premium
2Prioritize upgrades your insurer flags — every insurer weighs factors differently
3Document everything — keep receipts, inspection reports, and before/after photos
4Notify your insurer after each upgrade — savings only apply once they know
5Shop your policy annually — competitive quotes keep your insurer honest
6Bundle home and auto — typical savings of 10%–20%
7Increase your deductible — going from $500 to $2,000 deductible saves 15%–25%

Combined Upgrade Scenario

Example: 1975 Ontario Home, Current Premium $2,400/year

UpgradeCostPremium ReductionNew Annual Savings
Roof replacement$14,00010%$240
Remove aluminum wiring$10,00015%$360
Sump pump + battery backup$3,0008%$192
Backwater valve$3,5007%$168
Monitored security system$300 + $30/month10%$240
Total$30,800 + $360/yr~40%$1,200/year

After these upgrades, the new estimated premium is roughly $1,440/year — saving $960/year net of the security system cost. The upgrades also prevent costly claims that could cause further premium increases.

Note: Discounts are not always additive. Actual savings depend on your insurer’s algorithm and may be lower than the sum of individual discounts.

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