Updated: April 2025  |  bremo.io financial guides

Long-Term Care Insurance Canada: Is It Worth Buying? 2025

Long-term care insurance (LTCI) is one of the most debated products in Canadian financial planning. It covers the cost of personal care — whether at home, in a retirement residence, or in a long-term care facility — when you're no longer able to perform basic activities of daily living on your own. It can be enormously valuable, but it's also expensive, complex, and not available to everyone. This guide gives you an honest assessment.

Core question: Can you self-insure for potential care costs from your existing assets? If yes, LTCI may be optional. If no, and if you're insurable, LTCI may be worth serious consideration.

What Is Long-Term Care Insurance?

LTCI is insurance that pays a daily or monthly benefit when you require assistance with activities of daily living (ADLs) — typically two or more of: bathing, dressing, toileting, transferring, continence, and eating. Benefits usually trigger when you can't perform a set number of ADLs independently, or when you have a cognitive impairment such as dementia.

Most Canadian LTCI policies pay an indemnity benefit — a flat daily amount regardless of what your actual care costs are. A common benefit structure might be $100-$200/day, which equates to $3,000-$6,000/month.

How Canadian LTC Insurance Works

The Cost of LTC Insurance in Canada

LTCI premiums vary based on your age at application, gender (women pay more because they tend to live longer and need care longer), health status, and benefit structure chosen. Rough ranges for 2025:

Premiums are not tax-deductible for individuals in most provinces, though some business owners may have options. Benefits received are tax-free.

Who Offers LTCI in Canada?

The Canadian LTCI market is smaller than in the US. Major providers include:

Product availability and specific policy features vary by insurer. Working with an independent insurance advisor who can compare multiple products is strongly recommended.

The Case For Buying LTCI

The Case Against (or For Self-Insuring)

The Middle Ground: Hybrid Products

Some life insurance products now include a long-term care rider or "living benefit" that allows you to access a portion of your death benefit if you need care. These hybrid products are gaining popularity because:

These products are more complex and typically more expensive than standalone LTCI, but they appeal to those concerned about paying premiums they'll never "use."

When to Buy: Timing Matters

The best time to apply for LTCI is when you're in your mid-50s to early 60s. Reasons:

Once you have a significant health condition — heart disease, diabetes, cognitive changes, mobility limitations — you may become uninsurable or face exclusions. Don't wait too long.

Questions to Ask Before Buying

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