Canadian Insurance Act Basics 2025

How insurance companies are regulated in Canada, your consumer rights, and what protections you have.

Insurance regulation in Canada operates on two levels: federal and provincial. Understanding this framework helps consumers know what protections they have, what regulators to contact when problems arise, and why the same type of insurance can work differently in different provinces.

Federal Insurance Regulation: OSFI

The Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions (OSFI) is the federal regulator responsible for supervising all federally chartered financial institutions in Canada, including federally regulated insurance companies. OSFI's mandate is solvency supervision — ensuring insurance companies have adequate capital to pay claims.

Under the federal Insurance Companies Act, OSFI:

OSFI does NOT regulate insurance products directly (what's covered, how claims are handled) — that's the provinces' domain.

Provincial Insurance Regulation

Each province has its own insurance regulator that governs:

ProvinceInsurance Regulator
OntarioFSRA (Financial Services Regulatory Authority of Ontario)
British ColumbiaBCFSA (BC Financial Services Authority)
AlbertaAlberta Treasury Board and Finance
QuebecAMF (Autorité des marchés financiers)
ManitobaManitoba Financial Institutions Regulation Branch
SaskatchewanFCAA (Financial and Consumer Affairs Authority)
Nova ScotiaNova Scotia Finance and Treasury Board

Assuris: Policyholder Protection

Assuris is a not-for-profit industry-funded organization that protects Canadian life insurance policyholders if a member life insurance company becomes insolvent. All life insurance companies operating in Canada must be Assuris members.

Assuris protection limits (as of 2025):

Important distinction: CDIC (Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation) protects bank deposits — savings accounts, GICs, chequing accounts. CDIC does NOT protect insurance products. For insurance, Assuris is the consumer protection organization.

Property and Casualty Insurance Compensation (PACICC)

For property and casualty insurance (home, auto), the Property and Casualty Insurance Compensation Corporation (PACICC) provides similar protection. If your home or auto insurer becomes insolvent, PACICC protects you for:

Your Consumer Rights as an Insurance Policyholder

Right to a Policy Illustration

For any permanent life insurance policy, you have the right to receive an illustration showing the projected values under different assumptions. This allows you to compare products.

Right to a Free Look Period

Most provinces require a "free look" or "cooling off" period (typically 10 days) after receiving a new policy, during which you can return it for a full refund of premiums.

Right to Dispute a Claim

If your insurer denies a claim, you have the right to request a written explanation and escalate through the insurer's internal complaint process, and then to the relevant insurance ombudsman or regulator.

Right to Privacy

Insurers must comply with PIPEDA (Personally Identifiable Information) or provincial privacy laws governing how your personal and health information is collected and used.

Making a Complaint Against an Insurer

If you have a dispute with your insurer:

  1. Contact your insurer's ombudsman or complaint handling office
  2. If unresolved: escalate to your provincial regulator
  3. For life insurance market conduct issues: contact the OmbudService for Life and Health Insurance (OLHI)
  4. For general insurance: contact the General Insurance OmbudService (GIO)

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