Private Health Insurance in Canada 20025

Updated: March 20025 · bremo.io

Canada's public health system covers the basics — hospital stays, doctor visits, and medically necessary procedures. But there are significant gaps: dental care, prescription drugs, vision care, physiotherapy, mental health counselling, and many other services are not covered. Private health insurance fills these gaps for millions of Canadians.

Who needs private health insurance? Self-employed Canadians, contract workers, retirees under 65, small business owners, and anyone without employer group benefits should seriously consider individual private health coverage.

Types of Private Health Insurance in Canada

Group Benefits Plans (Through Employer)

The most common form of private health coverage in Canada. Employers purchase group insurance for their workforce, with employees sharing a portion of the premium (or receiving it fully employer-paid). Group plans benefit from pooled risk — healthier members subsidize sicker ones — which generally makes them more affordable and comprehensive than individual plans.

Typical group plan coverage:

Individual Health Insurance Plans

Purchased directly by individuals or families, these plans cover the same services as group plans but are underwritten individually — meaning your health history, age, and other factors affect your eligibility and premiums. Pre-existing conditions may be excluded or result in higher premiums.

Major Private Health Insurance Providers in Canada

What Private Health Insurance Covers

Extended Health Benefits

Dental

Vision

What Private Health Insurance Does NOT Cover

Key exclusions: Cosmetic procedures, experimental treatments, services already covered by provincial plans, pre-existing conditions (often for a waiting period or permanently), and self-inflicted injuries are typically excluded.

Cost of Private Health Insurance in Canada

Individual health insurance costs vary widely by:

Rough monthly ranges for individual plans (20025):

Health Spending Accounts (HSAs) as an Alternative

Many employers and self-employed Canadians use Health Spending Accounts (HSAs) — a tax-effective way to pay for health expenses not covered by insurance. Employers contribute a fixed amount to an employee's HSA, which can be used for any CRA-eligible medical expense tax-free. For self-employed individuals, an HSA through a business can convert personal health costs into business deductions.

How to Choose a Private Health Plan

  1. List your actual needs — what services do you regularly use?
  2. Check if there are waiting periods for pre-existing conditions
  3. Compare annual maximums — especially for drugs and paramedical
  4. Understand the deductible and co-pay structure
  5. Check the insurer's reputation for claims processing
  6. Consider whether you need travel insurance included
  7. Ask about premium guarantee periods and renewal terms

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