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Do I Need Disability Insurance in Canada?

Updated

Short Answer

If your income would disappear or seriously decline if you could not work for months or years due to illness or injury, you need disability insurance. Group coverage from an employer is a starting point but often insufficient on its own — the gaps matter.

Who Needs Disability Insurance

Situation Do you need coverage?
Self-employed with no group plan Yes — high priority
Employee with no group benefits Yes — high priority
Employee with group LTD but high income / commissions Yes — group likely doesn’t cover everything
Employee with excellent group coverage Maybe — review policy carefully
Partner dependent on your income Yes
Substantial passive income covering all expenses Consider optional
Near retirement (within 5 years) Lower priority — shorter exposure window

What Group LTD Typically Covers (and Doesn’t)

Feature Typical group LTD
Benefit amount 60–66.7% of base salary
Bonus/commission Often excluded
Elimination period (waiting period) 90–120 days
Benefit period To age 65, or 2 years “any occupation”
Definition of disability Own occupation first 2 years, then any occupation
Taxability Taxable if employer paid premiums
Portability Ends when you leave the employer
Coverage cap Many plans cap at $5,000–$10,000/month

Example gap: A 42-year-old earning $180,000/year receives 60% of salary under group LTD = $108,000/year = $9,000/month in benefits. But the plan caps at $8,000/month. After tax (benefit is taxable), net monthly is approximately $5,800 — against a lifestyle costing $9,000/month.

What Government Programs Provide

Program Coverage Limitations
EI Sickness Benefits 55% of insurable earnings up to ~$34,000/year max Maximum 26 weeks only
CPP Disability Up to ~$1,606/month (2026) Severe and prolonged disability test; high qualification bar
Provincial social assistance Minimal Means-tested; last resort

Government programs are a floor, not a plan. CPP-D plus EI sickness benefits combined replace less than 40% of income for anyone earning above $50,000/year.

The Tax Rule: Who Pays Premiums Determines Taxability

Who pays the premium Benefit when claimed
Employer pays 100% Benefit is 100% taxable income
Employee pays 100% Benefit is tax-free
Split (employer + employee) Benefit is taxable in proportion to employer contribution
Individual policy (self-paid) Benefit is always tax-free

This matters significantly. If your employer pays your LTD premium and you receive a $6,000/month benefit, you may net only $4,200/month after tax. A self-paid individual policy paying $4,500/month tax-free delivers more real income.

What to Look For in an Individual Policy

Feature What to look for
Definition of disability Own occupation for your specific profession
Benefit period To age 65 (not 2 or 5 years)
Elimination period 90 days is most common; 30 days costs more
Non-cancellable Insurer cannot cancel or raise premiums
Guaranteed renewable Insurer must renew if you pay premiums
Cost of living adjustment (COLA) Benefit increases with CPI — important for long claims
Residual/partial disability Covers partial income loss, not just total disability

Monthly Cost Benchmark

Annual income Rough monthly individual premium
$60,000 $100–$180/month (age 35, healthy, office occupation)
$100,000 $180–$300/month
$150,000 $280–$450/month
$200,000 $400–$600+/month

Premiums vary based on age, health, occupation class, benefit amount, elimination period, and riders selected.

When to Buy

  • As early as possible. Premiums are lower when you are young and healthy.
  • Before a health event. Pre-existing conditions can cause exclusions or declines.
  • When you become self-employed. Group coverage ends; replace it immediately.
  • When income rises above group coverage caps. Top up individually.

Bottom Line

Disability insurance is the most neglected form of financial protection in Canada despite covering the most likely income disruption most working people will face. Review what your employer actually provides, calculate the gap between benefit amount and real expenses, and fill it with an individual policy if needed — especially if you are self-employed.