Disability Insurance in Canada 2025: Short and Long-Term

Updated: March 2025 · bremo.io

Disability insurance protects your income if you become unable to work due to illness or injury. It is arguably the most important — and most overlooked — form of insurance for working Canadians. Statistics show that one in three workers will experience a disability lasting 90 days or more during their career. Without disability insurance, a serious illness or accident could mean financial devastation.

Key perspective: Your ability to earn income is your most valuable financial asset. A 35-year-old earning $70,000/year has $2.1 million in potential future earnings. Disability insurance protects that asset.

Types of Disability Insurance in Canada

Short-Term Disability (STD)

Short-term disability insurance replaces a portion of your income for a short period — typically 17 weeks to 26 weeks (sometimes up to 52 weeks). It kicks in after a brief elimination period, often tied to how long your sick leave lasts (e.g., after 1–2 weeks of sick pay).

Long-Term Disability (LTD)

Long-term disability picks up where STD ends. It's designed to protect income for extended periods — years or until age 65. LTD is the most critical disability coverage for serious illnesses like cancer, heart disease, or severe mental health conditions that keep you off work for months or years.

The Own Occupation vs. Any Occupation Distinction

This is one of the most critical distinctions in disability insurance:

Most group LTD plans switch from own-occupation to any-occupation after 24 months. Individual disability policies for professionals can be purchased with a permanent own-occupation definition — highly valuable for physicians, dentists, lawyers, and other specialists.

Government Disability Benefits

Employment Insurance (EI) Sickness Benefits

EI provides sickness benefits for up to 26 weeks for employed Canadians who have accumulated sufficient insurable hours. The benefit is 55% of average insurable weekly earnings, up to a maximum ($668/week in 2025). You must have a medical certificate confirming you cannot work.

CPP Disability Benefits

Canada Pension Plan Disability provides monthly payments to CPP contributors who have a severe and prolonged disability. To qualify:

Provincial Disability Assistance

Each province has a disability assistance program for residents who cannot support themselves and do not qualify for CPP Disability. Benefits are low (often $1,000–$1,500/month) and designed as a safety net. Programs include Ontario Disability Support Program (ODSP), BC Disability Assistance, Alberta AISH, etc.

Employer Group Disability Plans

Most medium and large employers provide group STD and LTD as part of their benefits package. Group disability benefits are pooled risk, making them less expensive than individual plans. However:

Individual Disability Insurance

Self-employed Canadians, professionals, and those wanting stronger coverage than their group plan provides should consider individual disability policies. Individual policies:

Taxation of Disability Benefits

Critical tax point: If your employer pays all or part of your LTD premiums, your LTD benefits are taxable. If you pay your own premiums personally (after-tax dollars), your benefits are tax-free. Many employees are unaware their LTD benefits would be significantly reduced by tax.

How Much Disability Insurance Do You Need?

Financial planners generally recommend disability coverage of 60–70% of gross income. Consider:

Free Banking to Stretch Your Healthcare Dollars

Every dollar you save on banking fees is a dollar for your health. KOHO offers free banking with no monthly fees and no minimum balance. Use code 45ET55JSYA for a bonus when you sign up.

Open KOHO Free — Code 45ET55JSYA