Your income is your most valuable asset. Disability insurance protects it if illness or injury stops you from working.
One in three Canadians will experience a disability lasting 90 days or more before age 65. Yet disability insurance is one of the most overlooked forms of protection. Without it, an injury or serious illness can wipe out years of financial progress in months. This guide explains how disability insurance works in Canada, what to look for, and how much it costs.
Disability insurance replaces a portion of your income — typically 60–80% of your pre-disability earnings — if you become unable to work due to illness or injury. Benefits are paid monthly for as long as you remain disabled, up to the policy's benefit period.
| Feature | Short-Term Disability | Long-Term Disability |
|---|---|---|
| Waiting period | 0–14 days | 90–180 days (elimination period) |
| Benefit period | Up to 26 weeks | 2 years, 5 years, to age 65 |
| Benefit amount | 60–85% of income | 60–70% of income |
| Most common source | Group employer benefit | Group or individual policy |
The definition of "disability" in your policy determines when you qualify for benefits:
You're considered disabled if you cannot perform the duties of your specific occupation. A surgeon who develops a hand tremor would qualify even if they could work as a general physician. Own occupation definitions are found mainly in individual policies and cost more but provide far better protection.
You're considered disabled only if you cannot work in any reasonable occupation. This is a much harder standard to meet and the standard definition in many group plans after 2 years. A surgeon who can work as a cashier would not qualify.
Many Canadian employers provide group short-term and long-term disability coverage as an employee benefit. Group coverage is convenient and often partially paid by the employer, but limitations include: non-portable (lost when you change jobs), often any-occupation definition after 2 years, and coverage may be inadequate for higher earners.
Canada Pension Plan provides a disability benefit for contributors with a severe and prolonged disability. The maximum benefit in 2025 is approximately $1,600/month — far less than most Canadians' income needs. CPP disability has strict eligibility criteria and lengthy application processes.
Purchased through an independent broker or directly from an insurer. Individual policies are portable, more comprehensive, and offer better definitions — but cost more than group coverage. If you're self-employed or your group coverage is inadequate, individual DI is essential.
| Profile | Monthly Benefit | Est. Monthly Premium |
|---|---|---|
| 35-yr-old professional, own occ, age 65 benefit period | $5,000 | ~$200–$350 |
| 40-yr-old professional, own occ, age 65 benefit period | $6,000 | ~$300–$450 |
| 35-yr-old, any occ, 2-yr benefit period | $4,000 | ~$60–$100 |
Costs vary significantly by occupation class, health, province, and policy features. Non-cancellable policies cost more but guarantee premiums.
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