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Is Employer-Paid Group Life Insurance Taxable in Canada?

Updated

Is Employer-Paid Group Life Insurance Taxable in Canada?

If your employer covers the cost of your group life insurance, that premium payment is a taxable benefit to you. The insured amount (what your family receives if you die) is not taxable — but the annual premium your employer pays on your behalf is treated as employment income.

Core Rule

RuleDetails
Taxable benefit✅ Employer-paid group term life insurance premiums
What is taxableThe annual premium attributable to your coverage
What is NOT taxableThe death benefit paid to your beneficiary
T4 reportingBox 40 (included in Box 14 employment income)
Employee-paid premiums❌ Not a taxable benefit — your own after-tax money

How the Taxable Amount Is Calculated

StepExample
Your coverage amount$200,000
Group premium rate$0.30 per $1,000/month
Monthly premium for your coverage$200,000 ÷ 1,000 × $0.30 = $60/month
Annual taxable benefit$60 × 12 = $720
This appears in Box 40$720 added to employment income

Different employers use different group rates — the actual rate depends on the plan carrier’s pricing. Your employer calculates and reports this.

Where It Appears on Your T4

T4 BoxContent
Box 14 — Employment incomeIncludes your salary plus the $720 insurance benefit
Box 40 — Other taxable allowances and benefitsShows the $720 life insurance premium (and any other benefits)
Payroll withholdingTax on the $720 should be withheld throughout the year

Types of Employer-Paid Insurance and Tax Treatment

Type of coverageTaxable benefit?Notes
Group term life insurance (employer-paid)✅ YesPremium = taxable
Accidental death and dismemberment (ADD)✅ Usually yesCRA considers most ADD premiums taxable
Dependent life insurance (employer-paid)✅ YesCoverage for spouse/children — premium taxable
Group health / dental premiums (employer-paid)❌ Not taxable (most provinces)See separate article
Critical illness insurance (employer-paid)DependsCan be taxable; benefit payout treatment also varies
Disability insurance (employer-paid)❌ Premium not taxable; BUT benefit is taxable income when receivedDifferent rule from life insurance
Employee-paid premiums (all types)❌ Not taxableYour own post-tax dollars

Life Insurance Premium vs Death Benefit: Tax Treatment

ItemTax treatment
Employer-paid premium✅ Taxable employment benefit — on your T4
Employee-paid premium❌ Not deductible; no tax impact
Death benefit to beneficiary❌ Not taxable — received tax-free
Group creditor insurance payoutMay be taxable — depends on policy structure

Tax Cost of the Benefit

Annual taxable benefitAdditional tax at 30% marginal rateAt 40% marginal rate
$300~$90~$120
$600~$180~$240
$1,200~$360~$480
$2,400~$720~$960

The actual tax cost depends on your marginal rate. For most employees with modest employer-paid premiums, the tax is a few hundred dollars per year — modest relative to the benefit of having life insurance coverage.

Disability Insurance: Different Rule

Life insurance and disability insurance are taxed differently:

AspectLife insuranceDisability insurance
Employer-paid premium✅ Taxable benefit❌ Not taxable
ReasonCRA policyCRA policy — but it means…
Disability benefit when receivedNot applicable✅ Taxable income when received
LogicIf employer pays life premium — you’re taxed on the perkIf employer pays DI premium — you pay tax on disability benefits if you ever claim

This is a meaningful planning consideration: employees sometimes choose to pay disability insurance premiums themselves (post-tax) so that any future disability benefit is received tax-free.

Bottom Line

Employer-paid group term life insurance premiums are a taxable benefit in Canada — they increase your T4 employment income via Box 40. The tax cost is modest for most employees since premiums are typically a small fraction of coverage. The death benefit itself, however, is entirely tax-free to your beneficiary. Understanding this distinction — premium is taxable, benefit is not — is the key point. If you also have employer-paid disability insurance, the opposite logic applies: the premium is not taxable, but the disability benefit will be taxable if you ever need to claim it.

AD&D insurance (accidental death and dismemberment)

Employer-paid AD&D premiums are also a taxable benefit, reported in Box 40 of your T4 — the same treatment as group term life insurance.

FeatureGroup term lifeAD&D
Employer-paid premiumsTaxable benefit (Box 40)Taxable benefit (Box 40)
Benefit paid on deathTax-freeTax-free
Benefit paid on injury (limb, sight)N/ATax-free (lump sum)

The tax treatment is consistent: premiums are income, benefits are capital — not income.


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