Snowbird Guide 2025: Wintering Abroad as a Canadian

Roughly 1 million Canadians — often called snowbirds — leave Canada each winter for warmer climates, with the United States, Mexico, and the Caribbean being the most popular destinations. Snowbirding can be a wonderful lifestyle, but navigating the immigration rules, tax implications, and health coverage requirements is essential to doing it right.

How Long Can a Canadian Stay Outside Canada?

US Stay Limits (Most Common Destination)

Canadians are generally admitted to the United States as visitors under the Visa Waiver Program (or B-2 visitor visa). The US allows a maximum stay of 6 months (182 days) per year without requiring a visa. This is discretionary — US border officers can admit you for less — but 6 months is the standard allowance for Canadian citizens.

Critical: The IRS's Substantial Presence Test can make you a US tax resident if you spend too many days in the US over a 3-year rolling period. The formula: (days this year) + (1/3 × days last year) + (1/6 × days two years ago) = 183 or more means potential US tax liability. Most snowbirds who stay under 120 days/year avoid this issue. Consult a cross-border tax professional.

Mexican Stay Limits

Canadian citizens can stay in Mexico for up to 180 days as a tourist (FMM tourist card). This makes Mexico a practical snowbird destination with generous allowances.

Effect on Canadian Provincial Health Coverage

Each province has rules about out-of-country coverage. Most provinces allow Canadians to be out of the country for up to 7 months (some 6 months) without losing provincial health coverage — but only if they maintain their primary residence in Canada and return for the minimum required time each year. Rules vary:

ProvinceMax Days OutsideNotes
Ontario (OHIP)212 days/yearMust be in Ontario 153 days/12-month period
British Columbia (MSP)7 months/yearBC must remain your primary residence
Alberta (AHCIP)6 months/yearMust maintain AB residence
Quebec (RAMQ)183 days/yearStricter — contact RAMQ for details

Check your specific province's rules annually — they change. If you overstay your province's limit, you may lose coverage and face a waiting period to re-enroll.

Travel Health Insurance: Critical for Snowbirds

Canadian provincial health plans provide extremely limited coverage outside Canada. If you are hospitalized in the US without travel medical insurance, costs can easily reach $100–$200,000+ for a serious illness or injury. This is the single most important financial protection for Canadian snowbirds.

Never skip travel health insurance. A helicopter air evacuation from the US back to Canada can cost $50,000–$100,000+ alone. A one-month hospital stay for a serious cardiac event can exceed $500,000 in the US. Travel insurance typically costs $500–$2,000 for a 6-month policy for a healthy 65-year-old.

Key insurance considerations for snowbirds:

Maintaining Canadian Residency While Snowbirding

Most snowbirds want to remain Canadian tax residents and retain all their Canadian benefits and entitlements. To maintain Canadian residency:

Canadian Tax Implications

Snowbirds who remain Canadian tax residents continue to file and pay Canadian taxes on worldwide income. Key points:

Banking and Money for Snowbirds

Financial management across two countries requires some planning:

Popular Canadian Snowbird Destinations

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Snowbird Checklist

  1. Confirm your province's maximum days outside Canada for health coverage
  2. Purchase comprehensive travel health insurance before leaving
  3. Notify your Canadian bank, investment accounts, and Canada Post of your address abroad
  4. Ensure you have a no-FX credit card for US/foreign spending
  5. Track your days carefully (both US 182-day limit and Canadian provincial limit)
  6. Consult a cross-border tax advisor if spending significant time in the US
  7. Leave a trusted person in Canada with power of attorney for emergencies