The average Canadian who reaches age 65 will need some form of long-term care for three to five years, and the cost ranges from $1,800/month in a government-subsidized nursing home (public, basic room) to $8,000–$12,000/month for a premium private facility — a five-year stay at even mid-range private care totals $300,000–$480,000. Provincial health plans cover the medical and nursing component, but residents pay for room and board (accommodation), which is income-tested in most provinces: lower-income seniors pay less, but even subsidized rates can consume most of a modest pension.
The critical financial lever is timing. Buying long-term care insurance in your 50s costs $100–$250/month and covers $3,000–$6,000/month in benefits; waiting until your 60s roughly doubles the premium, and waiting until you actually need care means you won’t qualify at all. For those who don’t have insurance, the practical funding order is: CPP + OAS + GIS pension income first, then RRIF withdrawals, then proceeds from selling the family home ($300,000–$800,000 in typical equity), and tax credits (disability tax credit, medical expense credit, caregiver credit) to claw back some of the cost.
Types of Long-Term Care
Type
Level of Care
Monthly Cost
Best For
Home care (government)
Part-time assistance
$0-$500 (subsidized)
Seniors living at home
Home care (private)
Part-time to full-time
$2,000-$8,000+
Seniors who prefer to stay home
Retirement home
Independent/assisted living
$2,500-$7,000
Mostly independent seniors
Assisted living
Daily support
$3,000-$8,000
Seniors needing regular help
Long-term care home (public)
24-hour nursing
$1,800-$3,000
Complex care needs
Long-term care home (private)
24-hour nursing
$4,000-$10,000+
Complex care, shorter wait
Nursing Home Costs by Province
Public/Government-Funded Long-Term Care
Province
Basic/Ward
Semi-Private
Private Room
Ontario
$1,935/mo
$2,280/mo
$2,701/mo
British Columbia
$1,245-$3,617/mo
Income-tested
Income-tested
Alberta
$1,800-$2,100/mo
$2,100-$2,400/mo
$2,400-$2,800/mo
Quebec
$1,250-$2,000/mo
Income-tested
Income-tested
Manitoba
$1,200-$2,700/mo
Income-tested
Income-tested
Saskatchewan
$1,100-$2,600/mo
Income-tested
Income-tested
Nova Scotia
$1,200-$3,200/mo
Income-tested
Income-tested
New Brunswick
$1,200-$2,800/mo
Income-tested
Income-tested
Most provinces income-test accommodation costs. Low-income residents pay less.
Private Long-Term Care
Quality Level
Monthly Cost
Standard private
$4,000-$6,000
Premium private
$6,000-$8,000
Luxury private
$8,000-$12,000+
Home Care Costs
Government-Funded Home Care
Province
Hours Available
Cost to You
Ontario
Up to 120+ hours/month
$0 (no co-pay)
BC
Varies by assessment
Income-tested ($0-$300/month)
Alberta
Varies
Income-tested co-pay
Quebec
Up to 35+ hours/week
Small co-pay
Private Home Care
Service
Hourly Rate
Monthly Estimate
Personal support worker (PSW)
$25-$40/hour
$2,000-$5,000
Registered nurse (in-home)
$50-$80/hour
$4,000-$8,000
Live-in caregiver
$200-$350/day
$6,000-$10,500
Companion/homemaking
$20-$30/hour
$1,600-$3,000
Meal preparation
$25-$35/hour
$500-$1,000
Home Modifications
Modification
Cost
Stairlift
$3,000-$10,000
Walk-in bathtub/shower
$3,000-$8,000
Ramps and grab bars
$500-$3,000
Widened doorways
$500-$2,000 each
Medical alert system
$30-$60/month
Home accessibility reno (full)
$10,000-$50,000
Retirement Homes vs Long-Term Care
Feature
Retirement Home
Long-Term Care Home
Regulation
Minimal (voluntary standards)
Government-regulated
Subsidy
None (fully private)
Government-subsidized
Cost
$2,500-$7,000+/month
$1,800-$3,000/month (public)
Waitlist
Minimal
6 months to 5+ years
Medical care
Limited (no 24-hour nursing)
24-hour nursing
Independence level
High
Low to moderate
Meals included
Usually 3/day
All meals included
Activities
Social programs, outings
Structured activities
Waitlist Times for Public Long-Term Care
Province
Average Wait
Notes
Ontario
6 months - 5 years
Toronto-area longest waits
BC
3-12 months
Shorter in smaller communities
Alberta
2-6 months
Varies by region
Quebec
6-24 months
Depends on CHSLD availability
Manitoba
3-12 months
Varies
Nova Scotia
6-24 months
Growing demand
How to Pay for Long-Term Care
Income Sources for Seniors
Source
Typical Monthly Amount
CPP (average)
$800-$900
CPP (maximum)
$1,364
OAS
$727
GIS (if low income)
Up to $1,065
Workplace pension
Varies
RRIF/RRSP withdrawals
Depends on savings
Investment income
Depends on portfolio
Total typical income
$2,000-$4,000
Financial Planning Strategies
Strategy
Details
Long-term care insurance
$100-$400/month premium (buy in your 50s-60s)
Sell family home
Typical equity: $300,000-$800,000
RRIF/RRSP meltdown
Structured withdrawals to cover care
Family contributions
Adult children sharing costs
Veterans Affairs
Up to $3,000-$4,000/month for eligible veterans
Tax credits
Medical expense credit, disability tax credit, caregiver credit
Long-Term Care Insurance
Feature
Details
Best purchase age
55-65
Monthly premiums
$100-$400 (depends on age, coverage)
Typical coverage
$3,000-$6,000/month benefit
Waiting period
30-90 day elimination period
Benefit period
2-5 years or lifetime
Tax treatment
Benefits are tax-free
Availability
Fewer insurers offering this in Canada
Tax Benefits for Long-Term Care
Credit/Deduction
Details
Medical expense tax credit
LTC accommodation costs qualify
Disability tax credit
$9,428 federal non-refundable credit
Caregiver credit
Up to $7,999 for dependants
Home accessibility tax credit
Up to $20,000 in reno expenses
Attendant care deduction
Deduct costs of personal care attendants
Planning Checklist
Age
Action
50s
Research long-term care insurance options
50s
Start conversations with family about preferences
60s
Consult financial advisor about care funding
60s
Prepare power of attorney (property + personal care)
65+
Tour retirement homes and LTC facilities
65+
Get assessed for government home care services
As needed
Apply for LTC home placement through local health authority
Cost Projection: 5 Years of Care
Scenario
Monthly Cost
5-Year Total
Home care (20 hrs/week private)
$4,000
$240,000
Retirement home (mid-range)
$4,500
$270,000
Public LTC (private room, Ontario)
$2,701
$162,060
Private LTC (standard)
$5,000
$300,000
Private LTC (premium)
$8,000
$480,000
The average Canadian senior needs 3-5 years of some form of long-term care. Planning early can save hundreds of thousands of dollars.
The Bottom Line
Start the conversation with family in your 50s, research long-term care insurance before 60, and get powers of attorney for property and personal care in place while you’re healthy. Government home care is free or near-free in most provinces and should be your first option — apply for assessment through your local health authority before considering facility placement. The waitlist for public long-term care can be six months to five years, so plan early and have a bridge strategy (private home care, retirement home) for the interim.