Most Canadians buy life insurance before they buy disability insurance — which is backwards. Statistically, you’re 3-4x more likely to be disabled before 65 than to die before 65. Disability is far more financially catastrophic than death because you keep needing money AND can’t earn it. Yet most people skip it. Here’s why that’s a mistake.
What disability insurance actually does
Disability insurance replaces a percentage of your monthly income if you become unable to work due to illness or injury. Typical replacement rates:
- Short-term disability (STD): 60-70% of weekly income, kicks in after a 1-2 week waiting period, pays for 15-26 weeks
- Long-term disability (LTD): 60-85% of monthly income, kicks in after 90-180 days, pays until you can work again OR until age 65
Most Canadian workers have STD via employer benefits (often automatic, employer-paid). LTD is sometimes employer-provided, often optional, often capped at low amounts ($3-5K/month). The biggest coverage gap for most professionals: LTD that’s enough to actually sustain their lifestyle.
The probability nobody tells you
The Canadian Life and Health Insurance Association reports:
- Risk of being disabled for 90+ days before age 65: ~25-30%
- Risk of dying before age 65: ~7%
- Average duration of LTD claim: 2.5 years
- Average age of LTD claimant: 41-45 (peak earning years)
If you’re a working Canadian between 30 and 60, your disability risk is 3-4x your death risk during those years. And being disabled costs you BOTH lost income AND ongoing expenses (housing, food, medical care).
What government coverage gives you (it’s not much)
- EI Sickness Benefit: 55% of weekly earnings, max ~$668/week, lasts up to 26 weeks. That’s roughly $34K maximum/year for half a year. Not enough.
- CPP Disability: Eligible if you’re “severely and prolonged” disabled. Max ~$1,800/month ($21,600/year). Long wait (4-6 months minimum). Hard to qualify — denial rate ~30%.
- Provincial disability programs: Vary by province. Generally low income replacement, designed for people with no other support, not income protection.
If you make $80K/year and become disabled, government programs combined replace maybe $30-40K of that — leaving a $40-50K gap PER YEAR for as long as you’re unable to work. Multiply by years. The gap is enormous.
The “own-occupation” vs “any-occupation” trap
Two definitions of “disabled” in policies:
- Own-occupation: You’re disabled if you can’t perform your specific job. A surgeon with hand tremors that can’t operate is “disabled” even if she could work as a medical educator.
- Any-occupation: You’re disabled only if you can’t perform ANY job for which you’re “reasonably qualified by education, training, or experience.” That same surgeon is NOT disabled because she could teach medicine. No payout.
Own-occupation costs more but is dramatically more protective. Most group employer LTD policies switch from own-occupation to any-occupation after 24 months — meaning they pay for 2 years, then say “you can work, find a different job” and stop paying. Individual policies you buy yourself can keep own-occupation for the full term.
What it costs
Monthly premiums for $5,000/month of LTD benefit, healthy non-smoker, own-occupation, 90-day waiting period, paying to age 65:
| Age + sex | Office worker (Class 4A) | Manual worker (Class 2A) |
|---|---|---|
| 30 male | $110-$150 | $180-$250 |
| 30 female | $140-$190 | $220-$310 |
| 45 male | $200-$280 | $340-$470 |
| 45 female | $260-$360 | $420-$580 |
Yes — women pay more because they statistically file more LTD claims (in part because of pregnancy-related conditions). Manual workers pay more because their occupational disability rate is higher.
If you’re employed: check your employer LTD FIRST
Read your employer benefits handbook for:
- Income replacement percentage: 60%, 70%, 85%?
- Monthly cap: Often $5-10K/month max. If you earn $200K, a $5K cap leaves a huge gap.
- Definition of disabled: Own-occupation for how long? Then switches to any-occupation?
- Pre-existing condition exclusions
- Who pays the premium: If employer pays, the benefit is taxable income. If you pay (via payroll deduction with after-tax dollars), the benefit is tax-free. Tax-free is dramatically better.
If your employer LTD is solid (own-occupation forever, no cap, employer pays the premium so it’s taxable, or you pay so it’s tax-free), you may not need individual coverage. Most policies don’t pass that test. The realistic strategy for professionals: take the employer LTD plus a smaller individual policy that fills the gap.
If you’re self-employed: this matters more than life insurance
Self-employed Canadians have NO employer LTD. EI sickness is capped at 26 weeks at $668/week. CPP Disability is hard to qualify for. The financial fallout of a 1-2 year disability without insurance is catastrophic.
A friend who arrived from the Philippines in 2017 and went self-employed as a graphic designer was hit by a car at 38, fractured spine, couldn’t work for 11 months. She had no LTD. EI covered the first 26 weeks at about $26K. After that, nothing. She drained her savings, took on credit card debt, and eventually moved in with her parents. If she’d had a $4,000/month LTD policy ($150/month premium), the 11 months would have been a financial inconvenience instead of a setback she’s still recovering from years later.
The honest priority order
- Emergency fund (3-6 months of expenses)
- Disability insurance (if working without solid employer LTD)
- Term life insurance (if you have dependents)
- Critical illness insurance (optional, for specific situations)
- Whole/universal life insurance (almost never the right answer for most people)
Frequently asked questions
Is disability insurance taxable in Canada?
Depends on who paid the premiums. If YOU paid (with after-tax dollars), the benefit is 100% tax-free. If your EMPLOYER paid, the benefit is taxable income. Self-funded individual policies are always tax-free on payout. This is a significant difference — $5K/month tax-free is worth way more than $5K/month taxed at your marginal rate.
Can I have disability insurance AND CPP Disability?
Yes, but most private LTD policies have a “CPP offset” clause — they reduce your benefit by what you receive from CPP Disability. Net effect: you get the same total income regardless of whether CPP approves you. The CPP approval still matters for medical access programs and pension credit accumulation.
Does mental illness count as disability?
Yes — depression, anxiety, PTSD, bipolar disorder all count IF they prevent you from working AND meet your policy’s definition of disabled. Mental health claims are actually the LARGEST category of LTD claims in Canada. Most policies pay these the same as physical disabilities, though some impose a 24-month cap on mental-health-only claims (read the fine print).
What if I become partially disabled?
Most modern policies have a “residual disability” or “partial disability” provision. If you can work part-time but earn less than 80% of your pre-disability income, the policy pays a partial benefit proportional to your income loss. Good policies have this; basic group policies often don’t. Important if your potential disability would gradually impair vs immediately stop you working.
Can I get disability insurance if I work from home?
Yes — work-from-home doesn’t affect eligibility, only your occupational classification (Class 4A office worker rates). Some insurers have started underwriting “remote work professionals” as a separate, slightly favourable class. Self-employed remote workers should specifically shop for policies that work for their income structure (often dividend + salary mix, which complicates income verification).
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