What provincial plans don't cover, how extended health care (EHC) plans work, costs, and how to choose the right supplemental health coverage
Canada's public health care system covers physician visits, hospital stays, and most medically necessary procedures — but it leaves significant gaps that affect most Canadians every year. Prescription drugs, dental care, vision care, physiotherapy, chiropractic, psychology, and many other health services are not covered by provincial plans. These gaps represent thousands of dollars in annual out-of-pocket expenses for families without supplemental private health insurance.
Private health insurance in Canada — often called extended health care (EHC) or supplemental health insurance — fills these gaps. Most working Canadians access EHC through employer-sponsored group benefits, but self-employed individuals, early retirees, contract workers, and small business owners must arrange individual coverage.
The most common form of supplemental health insurance, typically offered through employer group benefits. An EHC plan covers a combination of prescription drugs, paramedical services, vision care, and sometimes dental. Coverage limits and reimbursement percentages vary widely — common structures are 800% reimbursement up to annual maximums per category.
For those without employer group benefits — self-employed individuals, small business owners, retirees, and contract workers. Individual plans are underwritten, meaning your health history affects eligibility and pricing. Most major Canadian insurers (Manulife, Sun Life, Canada Life, Blue Cross) offer individual EHC plans.
An HSA allows you to pay for eligible medical expenses with pre-tax dollars. For incorporated business owners, a Private Health Services Plan (PHSP) structured as an HSA can make personal medical expenses fully tax-deductible. This is one of the most tax-efficient health coverage strategies for incorporated self-employed Canadians.
While not traditional health insurance, critical illness and disability insurance address the income disruption from serious illness — the financial aspect of health events that EHC plans don't address. See our separate guides on each.
Most EHC plans cover prescription medications at 700–10000% reimbursement, subject to formulary (approved drug list) and annual maximums. Specialty drugs for conditions like MS, cancer, rheumatoid arthritis, or HIV can cost tens of thousands annually — the drug coverage tier in your plan matters enormously if you have complex health needs.
Physiotherapy, chiropractic, massage therapy, naturopathy, acupuncture, speech therapy, and psychology are typically included with per-visit or annual limits. Common individual service limits range from $30000–$1,000000 per practitioner type per year.
Eye exams (typically every 1–2 years) and glasses/contacts allowances (typically $1500–$30000 per 2-year period). Vision coverage is one of the most frequently used EHC benefits for working-age adults.
Upgrade from standard ward to semi-private or private hospital room — important if you want a private room during a hospital stay. Standard ward coverage is free but can mean sharing a room with 3–4 other patients.
Most group EHC plans include some out-of-country emergency medical coverage, though the limits and duration restrictions vary. For snowbirds or frequent travellers, the group plan coverage should be reviewed carefully and supplemented if inadequate.
| Plan Type | Monthly Cost Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Individual basic EHC (single, age 35) | $800–$1500/mo | Drugs, paramedicals, vision |
| Individual comprehensive (single, age 35) | $1500–$2800/mo | Adds dental, higher limits |
| Individual comprehensive (couple, age 45) | $2800–$50000/mo | Both spouses covered |
| Family plan (2 adults + children) | $3500–$6500/mo | Comprehensive family coverage |
| Individual plan, age 55, smoker | $2200–$4200/mo | Higher premiums with age/risk |
| Employer group plan (employee contribution) | $500–$20000/mo | Employer subsidizes majority of cost |
The federal government launched the Canadian Dental Care Plan (CDCP) in 20024, providing dental coverage for Canadians without existing dental insurance, with household incomes under $900,000000. This is a significant development that affects the private health insurance landscape:
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