Key takeaways
What you’ll get from this article
- **Doctors and hospitals are covered.** Most other health costs – dental, prescriptions, vision, ambulance – are not.
- **Many provinces have a waiting period** of up to 3 months for new residents. You need private insurance to cover that gap.
- **Prescription drugs aren’t free.** Outside the hospital, you pay out of pocket or through a drug plan.
- **Dental and vision are almost entirely private** unless you qualify for a government program like the Canadian Dental Care Plan.
- **Ambulance rides cost money** – often $45 to $500+ depending on the province.
A lot of newcomers land in Canada thinking healthcare is free. And in some ways, it is – the part where you see a family doctor or end up in a hospital bed. That part is covered by your province.
But there’s a long list of things provincial health insurance doesn’t pay for. And some of those things – a cracked tooth, a prescription, an ambulance ride, glasses for your kid – are the ones you actually run into in normal life.
Worse, if you just landed, you might not even have provincial coverage yet. Some provinces make you wait up to 3 months. A lot of our parents found out about that the hard way.
Here’s what’s actually covered, what isn’t, and what you should do about the gaps.
What provincial health insurance does cover
Every province has its own health plan – OHIP in Ontario, MSP in BC, RAMQ in Quebec, AHCIP in Alberta, and so on. The names are different, but the core coverage is similar across the country:
- Visits to a family doctor or walk-in clinic
- Visits to a specialist (with a referral)
- Most hospital stays, including surgery
- Emergency room visits
- Medically necessary lab tests and X-rays
- Prescription drugs while you’re admitted to a hospital
- Maternity care and childbirth
This is the part Canadians brag about. And it’s genuinely good. You won’t get a $50,000 bill for having a baby or breaking your leg.
But that’s where the coverage stops.
The big gaps – what provincial health doesn’t cover

1. Prescription drugs (once you leave the hospital)
This one shocks a lot of newcomers. If a doctor writes you a prescription and sends you to the pharmacy, you pay for it out of pocket.
A common antibiotic might be $20. Blood pressure medication for a year could be a few hundred dollars. Insulin, asthma inhalers, mental health medications – they add up fast.
There are some exceptions. Seniors, people on social assistance, and kids in some provinces get help through provincial drug programs. Ontario has the Trillium Drug Program for high-cost cases. Quebec has a public drug plan you must enroll in if you don’t have private coverage. But for most working-age newcomers, drugs are out of pocket unless your employer gives you a benefits plan.
2. Dental care
Cleanings, fillings, root canals, crowns, braces – none of it is covered by provincial health insurance for most adults. A regular cleaning is about $150 to $250. A filling can be $200 to $400. A root canal and crown can easily run over $2,000.
The federal government launched the Canadian Dental Care Plan (CDCP) in 2024 for residents with household income under $90,000 who don’t already have dental insurance. It’s worth checking if you qualify (verify current eligibility at canada.ca). Some provinces also have free dental for kids in low-income families.
But for most newcomer families, dental is a private cost – either through a job benefits plan or paid in cash.
3. Vision care
Eye exams for adults aren’t covered in most provinces (Ontario covers them every 12 months only if you’re under 20 or over 65, or have certain medical conditions). Glasses and contact lenses are almost never covered. A pair of glasses for a kid can easily be $200 to $400.
If you wear glasses, budget for them like you would clothing – it’s a regular cost, not a one-time medical event.
4. Ambulance rides
This catches people off guard. In Ontario, an ambulance ride is $45 if deemed medically necessary by a doctor, $240 if not. In BC, it’s around $80 for residents and several hundred for non-residents. Alberta charges around $250 to $385. Air ambulance can cost thousands.
Verify current rates with your province – they change. The point is: an ambulance is not free.
5. Physiotherapy, chiropractic, massage, mental health
Outside of certain hospital-based services, these are private. A physiotherapy session is $80 to $120. A therapist or psychologist visit is $150 to $250 an hour. Some employer plans cover a few visits a year. Without that, you pay.
6. Semi-private or private hospital rooms
The hospital itself is free, but if you want a private room instead of the standard ward, you pay the difference – often $200+ per night.
7. Medical equipment and devices
Crutches, wheelchairs, hearing aids, CPAP machines, prosthetics – usually private unless you qualify for a specific assistance program. A pair of hearing aids can cost $4,000 to $6,000.
The waiting period nobody warns newcomers about
Here’s the part that catches new arrivals off guard.
Some provinces require you to live there for up to 3 months before your provincial health coverage starts. As of 2026, this applies in:
- Ontario – up to 3 months
- British Columbia – the rest of the month you arrive plus 2 more months
- Quebec – up to 3 months
- New Brunswick – up to 3 months
Alberta, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Nova Scotia, PEI, Newfoundland, and the territories generally cover new residents from day one or close to it. But always verify with your provincial health ministry before you land, because rules change.
If you land in a province with a waiting period and skip private health insurance to save money, one emergency room visit can wipe out months of savings. A simple ER visit and a couple of tests without coverage can be $1,500 to $5,000.
What to do about the gaps
If you just landed
Buy private newcomer health insurance to cover the waiting period. Plans are sold specifically for this – usually for 1 to 12 months until your provincial coverage starts. Coverage costs roughly $1 to $3 per day depending on age and the plan. It feels like wasted money until the day you need it.
Apply for your provincial health card the day you arrive. Don’t wait. Some provinces backdate coverage to your arrival date once approved, others don’t.
Once you’re covered provincially
If your job offers benefits, take them. A typical Canadian employer benefits plan covers prescriptions, dental, vision, paramedical services, and sometimes a small amount of life insurance. This is one of the biggest hidden values of a Canadian job, and a lot of newcomers don’t realize they should compare jobs on benefits, not just salary.
If you don’t have employer benefits – because you’re self-employed, contracting, or your employer doesn’t offer them – you have a few options:
- Buy private health and dental insurance. Plans for individuals and families exist. They’re not cheap (often $80 to $300+ a month), but they cap your out-of-pocket risk.
- Pay out of pocket and budget for it. If you and your family are generally healthy, this can be cheaper than insurance. Just don’t pretend the costs don’t exist.
- Check government programs. The Canadian Dental Care Plan, provincial drug programs, and assistance for kids and seniors are all worth looking into.
What our parents got wrong – and what we can learn from it
A lot of our parents came from places where you paid cash for everything medical, or where healthcare was state-run and you took what you got. They landed in Canada, heard “healthcare is free,” and assumed the whole system was covered.
Then they skipped dental cleanings for 10 years to save money. They split prescriptions in half to make them last longer. They didn’t fill prescriptions at all. They told themselves the eye exam wasn’t necessary.
It wasn’t that they were cheap. It was that nobody explained the system to them in their language, and they didn’t know which costs were real and which were optional.
The truth is: provincial health insurance is one piece of the picture. A good employer benefits plan or a smart private plan is the other half. Knowing the gaps is how you stop being surprised by them.
Get your provincial health card the week you arrive. Buy bridge coverage if your province has a waiting period. Take the benefits when a job offers them. And budget for the things provincial health doesn’t cover – because they’re not edge cases, they’re normal life.
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
Do I have to pay for an ambulance in Canada?
Yes, in most provinces. Charges range from about $45 in Ontario (if deemed medically necessary) to several hundred dollars in BC and Alberta. Air ambulance can cost thousands. Some employer benefit plans cover this.
What is the newcomer waiting period for provincial health insurance?
Ontario, BC, Quebec, and New Brunswick can require up to 3 months of residency before coverage starts. Alberta, Manitoba, and most other provinces cover you from day one. Check your province’s health ministry website.
Does provincial health cover prescription drugs?
Only while you’re admitted to a hospital. Once you leave with a prescription, you pay – unless you have a private drug plan, are a senior, on social assistance, or covered by a provincial drug program with specific eligibility rules.
Is dental care ever covered by the government?
The Canadian Dental Care Plan (CDCP), launched in 2024, covers some dental costs for residents with household income under $90,000 who don’t have private dental insurance. Some provinces also have programs for kids and low-income adults.
Do I need private health insurance during the waiting period?
Yes. A trip to the emergency room without coverage can cost thousands. Newcomer health insurance plans are sold specifically for this gap – usually for 1 to 12 months until provincial coverage kicks in.
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