Finances After a Car Accident in Canada | Claims, Insurance, and Lost Income
Updated
Finances After a Car Accident in Canada
A car accident creates financial complications beyond the immediate damage — from insurance claims and vehicle valuation disputes to lost income and gaps in coverage. Here is what to address in the days, weeks, and months after a collision.
First Week: Financial Steps
Step
Urgency
Details
Report accident to insurer
24–72 hours (within 7 days typically required)
Even if not at fault
Start accident benefits (AB) claim
ASAP — time limits apply
Through your own insurer
Document everything
Immediate
Photos, witness info, police report number
Track medical expenses
Starting day 1
Required for AB reimbursement
Contact employer about missed work
First week
Start income replacement benefit process
Request rental vehicle
When vehicle undriveable
Coverage typically $40–$80/day under your policy
Do NOT sign any settlements
Until full injury picture is known
Settling too early can leave you undercompensated
Accident Benefits: Your Own Insurance Covers You Regardless of Fault
Ontario income replacement is very limited at the standard $400/week cap — enhanced optional benefits of $600, $800, or $1,000/week are available for a small additional annual premium. Review your policy before you need it.
Income replacement benefit by province
Province
Income replacement benefit
Ontario (standard)
70% of gross income, max $400/week
Ontario (optional)
Up to $1,000+/week with enhanced coverage
Quebec (SAAQ)
90% of net income — no weekly cap; among the best
BC (ICBC)
Basic temporary total disability (limited); ICBC Enhanced Care covers more
Alberta
80% of gross, max $400/week standard
What Happens When Your Car Is Written Off
Step
Details
Insurer declares total loss
Repair cost exceeds a threshold of vehicle value
Insurer offers Actual Cash Value (ACV)
Market value at time of accident — not replacement cost
Your outstanding loan balance
May exceed ACV — this is the “gap”
Gap insurance
Covers the difference between ACV and loan balance
No gap insurance
You pay the gap out of pocket
Calculating the gap problem
Item
Example
Outstanding car loan
$35,000
ACV (insurer’s offer)
$27,000
Gap not covered without gap insurance
$8,000 — owed to lender even though car is gone
Gap insurance (annual cost)
~$200–$500/year — typically worth it on new financed vehicles
Disputing Your Vehicle’s Actual Cash Value
Insurers sometimes offer ACV below what comparable vehicles sell for. You can negotiate:
Step
How
Research comparables
AutoTrader, Carfax, Kijiji — matching year, make, model, mileage, province
Document vehicle condition
Recent maintenance, new tires, upgrades
Submit comparables in writing
Email your adjuster with the evidence
Request appraisal process
Ontario and most provinces have formal dispute mechanism
Involve your province’s regulator
If still unresolved — no-cost process
Typical outcome: Providing 3–5 comparable listings in your area often results in an improved settlement.
At-Fault vs Not-At-Fault: Financial Implications
Factor
At-fault accident
Not-at-fault accident
Accident benefits
Available from your insurer
Available from your insurer
Liability for other party’s losses
Your insurer handles (up to your limit)
Other party’s insurer handles
Premium impact
Significant increase (15–40%+)
Varies — restricted in Ontario
Accident forgiveness rider
Protects first at-fault accident
N/A
Duration on record
6 years (most provinces)
3–6 years (varies)
Right to sue
Limited in no-fault provinces
May pursue through tort system
Protecting Your Income: What Insurance Should Cover
Coverage type
What to check
Accident benefits (auto policy)
Income replacement amount — ensure enhanced if possible
Disability insurance (employer group)
Short-term and long-term disability start dates and amounts
Life insurance (if fatal)
Amount is adequate for family debt + income continuation
Critical illness
Pays lump sum for specific diagnoses — may apply to severe injury
Out-of-province coverage
Does your auto policy cover you while travelling in the US?
How an At-Fault Accident Affects Future Premiums
Scenario
Impact
First at-fault (no accident forgiveness)
Premium increase 15–40%; may affect clean discount
First at-fault (with accident forgiveness)
Rate increase often avoided or minimized
Second at-fault in 6 years
Major premium surge; some insurers may decline coverage
Shop at renewal after at-fault
Rates vary significantly — switching can offset increase
Driver training course
Some insurers reduce premium after an at-fault accident
Getting Proper Compensation for Injuries
If the other driver was at fault and you were injured, the accident benefits process is separate from pursuing a tort (fault-based) claim against the at-fault driver.
Path
What it covers
Accident benefits (own insurer)
Medical, income replacement, caregiver — immediate
Tort claim against at-fault driver
Pain and suffering, income loss above AB limits, other economic losses
Threshold for tort (Ontario)
Injury must meet “threshold” — minor injuries cannot be sued for pain/suffering
Lawyer (personal injury)
Typically work on contingency — no upfront cost; paid only on settlement
Do not settle injury claims quickly — the extent of injury, required rehabilitation, and long-term income impact often become clear only weeks or months after the accident.
Bottom Line
After a car accident, your first financial priority is opening an accident benefits claim with your own insurer — you are entitled to these benefits regardless of fault. If your car is written off, gather comparable vehicles to support your ACV negotiation and check whether gap insurance covers your loan balance. Do not sign settlement documents for injuries until you understand the full medical picture. Review your auto policy now to see whether your income replacement benefit is the standard $400/week or the enhanced amount — a few dollars per month of additional premium can translate to thousands per week if a serious accident ever prevents you from working.