Employee group benefits explained — EHC, dental, short and long-term disability, life insurance, and how to evaluate what your employer's package is actually worth
Most Canadian employees receive group benefits as part of their compensation package, but few take the time to fully understand what they have — or what gaps exist. Group benefits are a significant component of total compensation, often worth $5,000–$20,000 per year in value, yet many employees select coverage options during onboarding without properly evaluating them and never revisit the decision.
Understanding your group benefits has two purposes: maximizing the value of what your employer provides, and identifying gaps where you need individual coverage to supplement. Both matter for your financial security.
The health benefit component covering services not included in provincial health plans: prescription drugs, paramedical services (physiotherapy, massage, chiropractic, psychology), vision care, and often out-of-country emergency medical. Key things to evaluate in your EHC plan:
Group dental typically covers preventive care at 80–100%, basic restorative at 70–80%, and major restorative at 50%. Group plans often have no waiting periods (unlike individual plans), making them significantly more valuable for accessing major dental work immediately. Key variables:
Replaces your income if you are unable to work due to illness or injury for a short period, typically up to 17 or 26 weeks. Standard benefit is 60–85% of regular earnings. The STD benefit bridges the gap until long-term disability begins. Understand your plan's waiting period (how many days before benefits start — usually 0 for accidents, 7 for illness) and whether the benefit is taxable (employer-paid STD benefits are taxable income).
Kicks in after STD ends. The most financially significant protection in your group benefits package. Critical features to understand:
Typically 1–3 times annual salary, sometimes with options to purchase additional coverage. Key limitations:
| Gap | Solution |
|---|---|
| Group life coverage (1–2× salary) well below income replacement need | Individual term life insurance for the gap amount |
| LTD switches to any-occupation after 2 years | Individual own-occupation disability policy as supplement |
| LTD benefit period limited to 2 or 5 years | Individual LTD with to-age-65 benefit period |
| No out-of-country medical for extended travel | Standalone travel insurance for trips beyond coverage period |
| Dental annual maximum too low for planned major work | Coordinate timing across calendar years; consider dual coverage if spouse has plan |
| No coverage for mental health practitioners above low limits | Employee Assistance Program (EAP) as supplement; review plan limits |
Many larger Canadian employers now offer flexible benefits plans that allow employees to allocate benefit credits across different coverage types, or Health Spending Accounts (HSAs) that let employees use pre-tax employer dollars for eligible medical expenses not covered by core benefits.
HSAs are particularly valuable for expenses outside typical insurance categories — orthodontics above plan limits, laser eye surgery, fertility treatments, or high prescription costs. If your employer offers an HSA, understand the eligible expense list and annual credit amount — these are effectively tax-free additions to your compensation.
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