Out-of-Province Health Coverage in Canada 2025

Updated: March 2025 · bremo.io

One of the great strengths of Canada's health system is portability — your provincial health card provides coverage when you travel to other provinces. However, the coverage is not always seamless, and there are important gaps and differences you need to know about before travelling across provincial borders.

The Canada Health Act requires portability: Provinces must cover their residents for insured health services received in other provinces. However, the rate paid and the scope of coverage can differ, leading to potential out-of-pocket costs.

The Interprovincial Billing Agreement

Most provinces participate in the Interprovincial Health Insurance Agreements, which allow billing directly between provinces. Under this system:

This works smoothly for most hospital care. However, it does not always work for physician billing, and Quebec is notably outside the main agreement for many services.

Province-Specific Out-of-Province Coverage Details

Ontario (OHIP) Travelling to Other Provinces

OHIP covers emergency and elective medically necessary services received in other Canadian provinces, but at Ontario rates. If rates in the other province are higher, you may receive a bill for the difference. OHIP does not automatically cover ambulance services in other provinces.

British Columbia (MSP) Travelling

BC's MSP covers insured services received in other Canadian provinces at the BC rate. For emergency services, BC will pay what the other province charges up to the BC amount. Residents are strongly encouraged to carry supplemental travel insurance even within Canada.

Quebec — The Exception

Quebec is the most significant exception to interprovincial portability. Quebec residents travelling in other provinces and residents of other provinces receiving care in Quebec often face billing complications because Quebec does not participate in all interprovincial billing agreements. Quebecers may need to pay upfront and seek reimbursement from RAMQ; non-residents receiving care in Quebec may face direct billing.

What Out-of-Province Coverage Includes

What Out-of-Province Coverage Does NOT Include

Key gaps: Ambulance services, prescription drugs, dental services, vision care, and paramedical services are generally not covered when received outside your home province, even within Canada.

Ambulance Coverage Across Provinces

This is one of the biggest out-of-province surprises. Ambulance services are covered differently in each province, and your home province's coverage rarely extends to ambulance calls in other provinces. Costs can range from $300–$3,000+ for a ground ambulance, and $100–$50,000+ for air ambulance/medical evacuation.

Private travel insurance typically covers emergency ambulance and medical evacuation. If you frequently travel between provinces, consider annual travel insurance that covers all Canadian travel, not just international trips.

Planned Medical Travel Within Canada

If you're travelling to another province specifically to receive medical care (sometimes called "interprovincial medical travel"), your home province may or may not cover the costs. You generally need pre-approval from your home province's health plan for elective procedures sought in another province. Emergency care is always covered. Elective surgery tourism within Canada (e.g., travelling to a province with shorter wait times) is not automatically covered — check with your provincial plan before booking.

Students Studying in Another Province

Students who move to another province for school are in a transitional coverage situation. The general rule:

Workers Travelling Between Provinces

Workers who frequently travel between provinces for work should ensure their employer's group benefits plan includes out-of-province coverage (most good group plans do). Employer plans typically cover emergency medical expenses across Canada at the out-of-province rates.

What to Carry When Travelling Within Canada

  1. Your provincial health card (expired cards may not be accepted)
  2. A list of your current medications and prescriptions
  3. Your private insurance information (group plan and member ID)
  4. Emergency contact information
  5. Supplemental travel health insurance (for ambulance, drugs, and gaps)

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