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How to Save on Car Insurance in Canada (2026)

Updated

Car insurance in Canada is mandatory, but the premium you pay is not fixed. The same driver with the same car can pay $400–$800/year more depending on which insurer they choose, whether they have renewed without comparison shopping, and whether they are using available discounts. This guide covers every actionable way to lower your bill.

Average car insurance costs by province (2026)

ProvinceAverage Annual PremiumNotes
Quebec$700–$1,000Public SAAQ covers bodily injury; private insurers cover property damage only
Prince Edward Island$800–$1,100Maritime provinces have lower rates
New Brunswick$900–$1,200
Nova Scotia$1,000–$1,400
Manitoba$1,100–$1,400Public insurer (MPI)
Saskatchewan$1,200–$1,600Public insurer (SGI)
Alberta$1,500–$1,900Private insurers; rates increased post-reform
British Columbia$1,800–$2,200ICBC public insurer
Ontario$1,700–$2,200Highest private insurance rates in Canada

Step 1: Shop quotes at every renewal (save $200–$600/year)

The single most effective action is comparing quotes from multiple insurers at renewal — every year. Loyalty does not lower your rate; insurers reserve best pricing for new customers.

Where to get quotes in Canada:

PlatformHow It WorksProvinces
Insurance Bureau of Canada (IBC)Broker referral directoryAll private provinces
Kanetix.ca / RATESDOTCACompare multiple quotes onlineON, AB, BC, NS, NB, PEI
Intact InsuranceDirect insurer; largest in CanadaAll provinces
TD InsuranceDirect insurer; competitive online pricingON, AB, Atlantic
BelairdirectDirect insurer; strong telematics programON, QC, AB
Local insurance brokersShops multiple companies on your behalfAll provinces

How to compare: Get at least 3 quotes with identical coverage levels (same deductibles, same liability limits). Do not compare a $1M liability policy to a $2M policy — the cheapest quote with lower coverage is a false comparison.

Discounts that consistently reduce premiums

DiscountTypical SavingsHow to Get It
Bundle home + auto5–15% on both policiesUse same insurer for home and auto
Winter tires (Ontario, Quebec)2–5%Notify insurer; provide installer receipt
Telematics / usage-based (UBI)5–25% for safe driversEnroll in app-based program at signup
Multi-vehicle5–10% per additional vehicleInsure 2+ vehicles on same policy
Claims-free discount5–15% cumulativeMaintain clean claims record
Anti-theft device1–5%Installed alarm, tracker, or immobilizer
Graduated licence completion5–10%Complete G2 → G faster (Ontario)
Senior/mature driver (50+)5–10%Ask insurer directly
Alumni or professional association3–8%Group discount through alumni or union
Winter storage (for motorcycle or seasonal vehicle)25–40% for storage periodSuspend coverage Oct–Apr

Adjust your coverage and deductibles

ChangeAnnual SavingsTrade-off
Increase collision deductible $500 → $1,000$100–$250Pay more if you have a collision
Increase collision deductible $500 → $2,000$200–$500Significant out-of-pocket if claim
Remove collision on older vehicle (worth <$3,000)$300–$700No insurer payout if car is totalled
Remove comprehensive on older vehicle$100–$250No hail, theft, or flood coverage
Reduce liability from $2M to $1M$50–$100Not recommended — save elsewhere

Rule of thumb: If your vehicle is worth less than 10× the combined annual collision + comprehensive premium, those coverages may cost more than your car is worth. Check your vehicle’s current Black Book value at an auto dealer or through CARFAX Canada.

What raises your rate — and what to avoid

FactorRate Impact
At-fault accident+$400–$1,500/year for 6 years
Speeding ticket (minor)+$150–$400/year for 3–6 years
Speeding ticket (major, 50+ km/h over)+$600–$1,500/year; possible license suspension
Distracted driving conviction+$1,000–$2,500/year; some insurers refuse coverage
DUI/impaired driving+$2,000–$5,000/year; high risk insurer required
Lapse in coverage (gap over 30 days)Loss of claims-free discount
Moving to a higher-risk postal codeVaries; inner Toronto vs. Barrie can differ by 40%
Adding a young driver (G2) to policy+$1,500–$4,000/year

Province-specific notes

Ontario: Rates are among the highest in Canada but recently constrained by government review. Insurers are regulated by FSRA. You can dispute a rate increase through the Financial Services Regulatory Authority if you believe the increase is unreasonable.

Alberta: The government capped rate increases at 2023–2024. A new risk-based rate system proposed for 2025–2026 may change this — check the current regulatory environment before renewing.

British Columbia (ICBC): Insurance is provided by ICBC, the public provincial insurer. Optional coverage is available from private insurers on top of basic ICBC coverage. You cannot shop the basic coverage, but optional additions (increased liability, comprehensive) can be compared.

Quebec: The SAAQ covers bodily injury province-wide under no-fault rules. Private insurers cover only property damage. This structure produces significantly lower premiums than private-market provinces.