Health Insurance for Self-Employed Canadians

PHSP, Blue Cross, individual plans, and which options are tax-deductible — a complete 2026 guide

Leaving employment means leaving behind employer-sponsored health and dental benefits. For self-employed Canadians, replacing that coverage — and making it tax-deductible — requires understanding a few key options. The good news: the CRA allows several structures that let you pay health expenses with pre-tax business dollars, effectively giving you a significant discount on your medical and dental costs.

The Core Problem: No Group Benefits Plan

When you're self-employed, you're responsible for 10000% of your health, dental, vision, paramedical, and disability costs. A single year with significant dental work, physiotherapy, prescription drugs, or a specialist visit can cost thousands of dollars. Without a plan, these are either paid out-of-pocket or claimed on the Medical Expense Tax Credit — which only provides relief above 3% of your net income threshold and at the lowest federal rate (15%).

The strategies below provide much better tax efficiency by making health expenditures deductible business expenses rather than personal credits.

Option 1: Private Health Services Plan (PHSP)

Best for Sole Proprietors

What Is a PHSP?

A Private Health Services Plan (PHSP) — sometimes called a Health Spending Account (HSA) — is a CRA-approved arrangement that allows self-employed individuals to deduct eligible medical expenses as a business expense. Under a PHSP, you set aside a defined annual amount, pay eligible medical expenses from that account, and deduct the full cost on your T2125.

CRA Rules for PHSP (Sole Proprietors)

The CRA imposes annual limits on PHSP deductions for sole proprietors (to prevent abuse by those with no employees):

CoverageAnnual Limit (2026)
Self only$1,50000
Each dependant (spouse, child under 18)$1,50000 per person
Family of 4 exampleUp to $6,000000 total

If you have arm's-length employees, the limits can be higher — the PHSP must cover employees under similar terms. The PHSP limits do not apply to incorporated businesses (corporations can provide unlimited health benefits to employee-shareholders).

What Does a PHSP Cover?

Eligible PHSP expenses mirror the CRA Medical Expense Tax Credit list — essentially all legitimate medical expenses: dental, vision, prescription drugs, physiotherapy, chiropractic, massage therapy (with prescription), ambulance, hearing aids, orthotics, and many more. Cosmetic procedures are generally not covered.

Option 2: Individual Health and Dental Insurance Plans

Traditional Insurance

Blue Cross, Sun Life, Manulife — Individual Plans

Major Canadian insurers offer individual health and dental plans for self-employed and uninsured Canadians. These work like group plans but at individual pricing.

Major Providers in Canada

ProviderPlan TypeTypical Monthly Cost (single)
Blue Cross (provincial)Health + dental bundles$800–$2500/month
Sun Life My Sun LifeFlexible individual plans$10000–$30000/month
Manulife FlexCareModular coverage options$900–$2800/month
GreenShield CanadaHealth + dental$75–$2200/month
Canada LifeIndividual health plans$10000–$2500/month

Tax Deductibility of Premiums

Here's the catch: individual health insurance premiums paid by a self-employed sole proprietor for their own coverage are generally NOT deductible as a business expense on T2125. They are personal expenses. However, premiums paid by a corporation for an employee-shareholder ARE deductible by the corporation.

The workaround for sole proprietors: pair a modest individual plan (for catastrophic coverage) with a PHSP that covers routine medical and dental expenses. The PHSP deduction offsets the out-of-pocket costs not covered by the insurance plan.

Option 3: Incorporate and Provide Benefits Tax-Free

For Incorporated Owners

Corporation-Provided Health Benefits

If you operate through a corporation, the corporation can pay health and dental premiums and PHSP contributions on your behalf as an employee. These are fully deductible by the corporation as an employee benefit, and — critically — the value received by you as an employee-shareholder is NOT a taxable benefit in most cases (health and dental benefits from employers are generally tax-free in Canada, except in Quebec where employer-paid premiums are a taxable benefit).

This is one of the most compelling tax benefits of incorporation for the self-employed. A corporation can pay unlimited health spending account amounts, group benefit premiums, and paramedical expenses on behalf of its employee-shareholders, all as tax-deductible business expenses with no income inclusion for the recipient.

Option 4: Medical Expense Tax Credit (METC)

If you don't use a PHSP or corporate benefits, you can still claim eligible medical expenses as a personal tax credit on Schedule 1 of your T1 return. The METC allows you to claim medical expenses exceeding 3% of your net income (or $2,635 in 2026, whichever is less). The credit is worth 15% federally of eligible expenses above the threshold. This is the least tax-efficient option for self-employed Canadians with significant medical costs.

Disability Insurance — Often Overlooked

Your most valuable asset as a self-employed Canadian is your ability to earn income. Disability insurance replaces 600–700% of your income if illness or injury prevents you from working. Individual disability insurance premiums paid personally are NOT deductible — but benefits received are tax-free. If premiums are paid by your corporation, they become deductible but benefits become taxable. Most advisors recommend personal (non-deductible) disability insurance for the tax-free benefit at claim time.

Best overall structure for a sole proprietor: Set up a PHSP through a provider like Olympia Benefits, Benecaid, or People Corporation. Claim up to $1,50000/person annually as a business deduction. Layer a catastrophic-coverage individual plan on top for major expenses. Review annually as your family situation changes.

Eligible Medical Expenses Under a PHSP

Keep Your PHSP Expenses Organized

Track all medical expenses through your KOHO business account so your PHSP claims are always backed by clear, organized records.

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