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Is Employer-Paid Dental and Health Insurance Taxable in Canada?

Updated

Is Employer-Paid Dental and Health Insurance Taxable in Canada?

For most Canadians, employer-paid health and dental premiums are one of the best tax-free benefits available. CRA does not require employees to include private health services plan premiums in their income — but Quebec takes a different approach and taxes these benefits provincially.

Federal Rule: Not Taxable

RuleDetails
Federal treatment❌ Not a taxable benefit
T4 Box 40Employer-paid PHSP premiums do not appear here
CRA authorityIT-339R2 (IT Bulletin); Folio S2-F3-C2
Applies toExtended health, dental, vision, prescription drugs, paramedical services
ConditionMust be a qualifying private health services plan (PHSP)

Quebec: Taxable Provincially

RuleDetails
Quebec treatment✅ Taxable benefit on provincial return
RL-1 Box JEmployer-paid PHSP premiums appear in Box J of RL-1
Federal treatmentStill not taxable federally (no T4 Box 40 amount)
Quebec onlyOnly applies to Quebec provincial income tax
ImpactEmployees pay Quebec provincial tax on the premium value

Types of Employer-Paid Benefits and Tax Treatment

Benefit typeFederalQuebec provincial
Extended health premiums❌ Not taxable✅ Taxable
Dental premiums❌ Not taxable✅ Taxable
Prescription drug premiums❌ Not taxable✅ Taxable
Vision care premiums❌ Not taxable✅ Taxable
LTD / STD premiums❌ Not taxable❌ Not taxable (generally)
Group life insurance premiumsTaxable✅ Taxable
AD&D premiumsTaxable✅ Taxable
Employee assistance program (EAP)❌ Not taxable❌ Not taxable
Critical illness (employer-paid)DependsDepends

What Is a Qualifying Private Health Services Plan (PHSP)?

CriterionDetails
Must coverEligible medical expenses under the Income Tax Act
Cannot beA plan that pays wages in lieu of salary
Primary purposeReimbursement of medical / dental / drug expenses
Common examplesBlue Cross, SunLife, Manulife group benefits plans
CRA referenceIT-339R2; must qualify as PHSP to receive tax-free treatment

If a plan does not qualify as a PHSP — for example, if it pays cash directly or covers non-medical expenses — the premiums may lose the non-taxable status.

Medical Expense Tax Credit (METC): Can You Claim Premiums?

SituationMETC claimable?
Employer paid the premium (non-taxable to you)❌ No — cannot claim someone else’s payment
You paid via payroll deduction (your after-tax dollars)✅ Yes — eligible medical expense
You pay the full premium directly✅ Yes — eligible medical expense
Premium included in your income as a taxable benefit (e.g., some cases)✅ Yes if included in your income

Disability Insurance: The Premium vs Benefit Trade-Off

AspectEmployer pays LTD premiumEmployee pays LTD premium
Is premium taxable?❌ Not taxableN/A (your own dollars)
Are disability benefits taxable if claimed?✅ Yes — fully taxable❌ No — tax-free
Planning implicationConvenience for employer; but benefits are taxableEmployee pays premium post-tax; benefits are tax-free

Many advisors suggest higher-earning employees consider opting out of employer-paid LTD premium coverage and paying personally — so that if they ever become disabled, the benefit is received tax-free.

Quebec RL-1 vs Federal T4

SlipBoxWhat appears
T4 (federal)Box 40Life insurance premiums, company car, parking, etc. — NOT health/dental
RL-1 (Quebec)Box JHealth, dental, vision, drug premiums paid by employer
Quebec employeeFiles both federal and provincial returnsAdjusts for provincial taxable benefit

Bottom Line

Employer-paid health and dental insurance is one of Canada’s most generous employer benefits precisely because it is not taxable federally. Your employer can provide you with $3,000–$5,000/year in health and dental coverage with zero tax cost to you. The exception is Quebec, where these premiums appear on your RL-1 and are subject to provincial income tax. Understanding the disability insurance trade-off — paying premiums yourself means receiving benefits tax-free — is important for higher earners who want to protect tax-free disability income if they are ever unable to work.

The Canadian Dental Care Plan (CDCP)

The federal Canadian Dental Care Plan, launched in 2024, provides government-funded dental coverage for uninsured Canadians with a family income below $90,000. This is separate from employer-provided dental insurance.

FeatureDetails
Who qualifiesUninsured Canadians, income < $90,000/year
BenefitFederal government pays dental costs directly to participating dentists
Is the benefit taxable?No — government health benefits are not taxable income
Affects employer insurance?CDCP covers the gap when no employer plan exists
Apply viaMy Service Canada Account or Service Canada offices

The CDCP is not employer-paid — it is a direct government benefit, similar in structure to provincial health care. Like OAS or GIS, receiving CDCP dental coverage does not create a taxable benefit on your T1 return.


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