
Individual disability insurance in Canada is the coverage you own personally: portable, customisable, and not tied to any employer. Most Canadians who have disability coverage have never thought to ask whether what they have is the right kind. This article answers that question directly, with a clear comparison of what group coverage provides and what individual coverage adds, and a framework for deciding which you need.
This is Article 3 of an eight-part series on disability insurance in Canada. Article 1 established the foundation. Article 2 examined group coverage in depth. This article examines individually-owned coverage, makes the comparison explicit, and provides the decision framework. Article 4 covers how to buy individual disability insurance.
What is individual disability insurance in Canada?
Individual disability insurance in Canada is a personally-owned insurance contract that replaces 60 to 85% of your income if illness or injury prevents you from working. Unlike group coverage, it is purchased directly from a licensed insurer, is underwritten based on your specific health and occupation, and remains in force regardless of your employment status.
Individual disability insurance is a contract between you and an insurer that has nothing to do with your employer. It travels with you through every job change, career pivot, and period of self-employment. The insurer cannot cancel it, raise your premium, or change your terms as long as you pay. For working Canadians, it is the only form of disability coverage that provides those guarantees.
ProtectYourNest.ca — Individual Disability Insurance in Canada
When you buy an individual disability policy, the insurer assesses your application through a medical and occupational underwriting process. Your age, health history, occupation, income, and any existing coverage all factor into the terms and premium offered. Once the policy is issued, those terms are locked in. The insurer cannot revisit them because your health deteriorated, your occupation became riskier, or market conditions changed.
This is the fundamental structural difference between individual and group coverage, and it is the reason timing matters so much. Individual disability insurance purchased at 34 in good health produces materially better terms at a lower premium than the same coverage purchased at 44 after a decade of health changes. The policy you buy today is the policy you keep for life, at the terms established today. According to the FCAC’s guide to disability insurance, individual policies are available through licensed life and health insurance advisors and can be customised with a range of riders and coverage features not available through group plans.
How individual disability insurance differs from group coverage
Individual disability insurance differs from group coverage on six dimensions that matter to a claimant: portability, cancellability, the definition of disability, tax treatment, rider availability, and the 24-month definition shift. Group plans are employer-dependent and can change. Individual policies are locked in at issue and travel with you for life.
Group vs individual disability insurance: the dimensions that matter
Feature
Group (employer plan)
Individual (personally owned)
Portability
Ends when employment ends
Travels with you regardless of employment
Cancellability
Insurer and employer can change terms or end the plan
Non-cancellable and guaranteed renewable: insurer cannot change terms or premium
Definition of disability
Own occupation for 24 months, then shifts to any occupation in most plans
Own occupation or regular occupation maintained for full benefit period, no shift
Tax treatment of benefits
Taxable when employer pays the premium, reducing net benefit by 30 to 40%
Tax-free when you pay the premium personally
Benefit amount
60 to 66% of salary, subject to monthly cap set by the plan
Up to 85% of income, structured to your specific income and needs
Medical underwriting
No underwriting required: coverage is automatic for eligible employees
Required at time of purchase: health history reviewed and exclusions may apply
Rider availability
Limited: plan terms set by employer and insurer
COLA, FIO, return of premium, waiver of premium: fully customisable
Coordination of benefits
All-source maximum applies: CPP disability deducted from benefit
Individual policy designed to fill the gap group coverage leaves, not replace it
The most important difference between group and individual disability insurance is not the benefit amount or the premium. It is the guarantee. A group plan can be changed, capped, or cancelled by your employer or their insurer. An individual non-cancellable policy cannot. That guarantee is what you are really buying when you buy individual disability insurance in Canada.
ProtectYourNest.ca — Individual Disability Insurance in Canada
The definition of disability: why own occupation matters
The definition of disability is the single most important clause in any disability insurance policy. It determines whether a claim is paid. Individual policies can maintain an own occupation definition for the full benefit period, meaning you are considered disabled if you cannot perform the duties of your specific job, even if you are capable of other work. Group plans typically offer this definition only for the first 24 months before shifting to a more restrictive standard.
The comparison table above shows that individual disability insurance can maintain an own occupation or regular occupation definition to age 65 with no definition shift. In practical terms, this means that a software developer whose anxiety disorder prevents sustained concentration can continue receiving benefits at month 25 even if the insurer believes they could work in a lower-demand role. Under a standard group plan, that same claim would face review under an any occupation standard at month 25, and might be denied.
Three definitions exist in Canadian disability insurance and each produces meaningfully different claim outcomes for the same condition. Own occupation pays if you cannot do your specific job, regardless of whether you work elsewhere. Regular occupation pays if you cannot do your job and are not working in any other role. Any occupation pays only if you cannot work in any role for which you are reasonably suited by education, training, or experience. Individual policies can offer all three. Group plans almost always shift to any occupation after 24 months.
This is an introduction
The definition of disability is covered in full depth in Article 6 of this series: Own Occupation vs Any Occupation, The Definition That Determines Whether Your Claim Gets Paid. That article explains all three definitions in plain language, shows the exact contract phrases to look for, covers how occupation class determines which definition is available to you, and explains why mental health claims are particularly vulnerable at the 24-month definition shift.
The features that only individually-owned policies provide
Individual disability insurance differs from group coverage on six dimensions that matter to a claimant: portability, cancellability, the definition of disability, tax treatment, rider availability, and the 24-month definition shift. Group plans are employer-dependent and can change. Individual policies are locked in at issue and travel with you for life.
Non-cancellable and guaranteed renewable
Exclusive to individual policies
A non-cancellable and guaranteed renewable (NCGR) policy is one where the insurer cannot cancel your coverage, cannot increase your premium, and cannot change your policy terms for any reason, as long as you pay your premiums on time. This provision is the foundation of individual disability insurance and is entirely absent from group plans.
In practical terms: a 35-year-old who buys an NCGR policy with a $5,000 monthly benefit and a $180 monthly premium will still have that exact policy at exactly that premium at age 55, even if they develop cancer, a heart condition, or any other serious health issue in the interim. The insurer has no recourse. The CLHIA’s Guide to Disability Insurance identifies non-cancellable and guaranteed renewable as the strongest available form of policy guarantee in Canadian disability insurance.
Contrast this with a group plan: your employer can change insurers, reduce the benefit percentage, introduce a new benefit cap, or eliminate LTD coverage entirely as part of a benefits renegotiation. None of those changes require your consent. An NCGR individual policy cannot be touched.
Future insurability option (FIO)
Exclusive to individual policies
The future insurability option is the right to purchase additional disability coverage at specified future dates without providing new medical evidence, regardless of any health changes that have occurred since the original policy was issued. You lock in your insurability today, and the right to increase coverage is contractually guaranteed for the future.
This is one of the most valuable and least discussed features in Canadian disability insurance. A 32-year-old who buys an individual policy today with a $4,000 monthly benefit and an FIO can exercise the option to increase to $6,000 at age 38 without a new medical exam, even if they have been diagnosed with a chronic condition in the intervening years. The insurer cannot decline the increase. The premium for the additional coverage is based on age at the time of the increase, not original issue age.
Best used by: young professionals early in their career who expect income to grow significantly, and who want to lock in their insurability before health changes make additional coverage unavailable or exclusion-laden. Buy the FIO now, even if the base coverage amount is modest. The option is harder to obtain later.
Cost of living adjustment (COLA) rider
Optional rider
A COLA rider increases your monthly disability benefit annually during a claim, typically indexed to the Consumer Price Index up to a specified cap, often 3 to 4% per year. Without COLA, a fixed monthly benefit loses purchasing power over time. With COLA, the benefit maintains its real value throughout the claim period.
Example: A $5,000 monthly benefit with no COLA is worth $3,769 in real terms after 10 years of 2.8% inflation. The same benefit with a 3% COLA rider grows to $6,719 over 10 years. For a disability lasting 15 or 20 years, the COLA rider can mean the difference between a benefit that covers your obligations and one that has been eroded to the point of inadequacy. For any long-term disability policy, the COLA rider is worth the additional premium.
Waiver of premium
Standard in most policies
The waiver of premium provision suspends your obligation to pay premiums while you are disabled and collecting benefits. Your policy remains fully in force at no cost during the disability period, and premiums resume only when you return to work. Most individual disability policies include this as a standard feature. Confirm it is included before purchasing any policy.
This matters because disability is precisely the time when monthly cash flow is most constrained. A policy that requires premium payments while benefits are being paid defeats part of its own purpose. Waiver of premium ensures the policy stays in force when it is most needed, regardless of whether the policyholder can afford the premium during recovery.
Return of premium rider
Optional rider, higher cost
A return of premium rider refunds a portion of premiums paid, typically 50%, if no disability claim has been made over a specified period, usually 10 to 15 years. It is the disability insurance equivalent of getting money back for not using your coverage. The rider adds meaningfully to the annual premium and the financial case for it depends on your circumstances.
The return of premium rider is not right for everyone. The additional premium cost is real and the refund is not guaranteed in all conditions. It appeals most to buyers who are disciplined about maintaining coverage but want to reduce the total lifetime cost if they remain healthy. For most buyers, the priority should be securing adequate coverage at the right definition and benefit period first, then considering riders like return of premium as enhancements if the budget allows.
When to buy individual disability insurance in Canada
The best time to buy individual disability insurance in Canada is when you are young and healthy. Premiums are lower, fewer exclusions apply, and the future insurability option is most valuable. Every year of delay increases the cost and the risk that a new health condition will either raise your premium or result in coverage exclusions that leave gaps in your protection.
How timing affects individual disability insurance in Canada
Ages 28–35
Best time to buy. Lowest premiums, fewest exclusions, most favourable underwriting. Health conditions that develop later cannot affect the policy terms already locked in. The future insurability option is most valuable here: income will grow, and the ability to increase coverage without medical evidence is a significant asset. This is the window where buying is most cost-effective for the full lifetime of coverage.
Ages 36–44
Still a good time, but act before health changes accumulate. Premiums are higher than at 28 but still manageable. The risk in this window is that common conditions such as hypertension, anxiety, back problems, and elevated cholesterol begin to appear on medical records. Each new condition can trigger exclusions or premium loadings. Buy before conditions accumulate, not after.
Ages 45–55
Possible but more complex. Premiums are materially higher. Health history reviews are more thorough. Exclusions for specific conditions are more common. Coverage is still obtainable but the underwriting process is more involved and the total lifetime cost of the policy is higher. Still worth doing, especially for professionals who have not yet secured individual coverage and whose group plan carries the 24-month definition shift.
The health change risk
Once a health condition appears in your medical records, it becomes part of the underwriting assessment for any new individual disability application. Conditions treated before the policy application can result in a specific exclusion rider, meaning the policy will not cover disability arising from that condition. A policy purchased before the condition developed would have no such exclusion. This is the specific risk of waiting: not just higher premiums, but narrower coverage. The CLHIA’s disability insurance guide notes that pre-existing conditions are among the most common sources of claim disputes in individually-owned policies where coverage was purchased after the condition existed.
Elimination periods and benefit periods: two decisions that shape every individual policy
The elimination period is the waiting period between the start of a disability and the first benefit payment. The benefit period is how long the policy pays. Every individual disability policy requires you to choose both. Together they are the two decisions that most directly affect what you pay and what you receive. Both are introduced here because they determine exactly how individual coverage coordinates with your group plan.
The elimination period functions like a time-based deductible. Common options in Canadian individual disability policies are 30, 60, 90, and 120 days. Longer elimination periods produce lower premiums. The right choice is determined by one question: how many months of essential expenses can you fund from your emergency fund without any income? A fully funded three-to-six-month emergency fund makes a 90-day elimination period safe. You bridge the gap yourself, pay a lower premium, and the individual policy begins exactly when the gap exceeds what your savings can cover. Without that buffer, a shorter and more expensive elimination period is necessary.
The benefit period is how long the insurer will pay benefits once the elimination period ends. Options typically range from two years to five years to age 65. For most working Canadians, anything shorter than to-age-65 leaves the most financially catastrophic scenario uncovered: a disability lasting 10, 15, or 20 years. A two-year benefit period protects against short-term income disruption but not against the kind of long-term disability that permanently changes a household’s financial trajectory. The benefit period to age 65 is the standard recommendation for any individual policy intended as genuine long-term income protection.
This is an introduction
Elimination periods, benefit periods, and benefit amounts are covered in full in Article 5 of this series: How to Structure a Disability Policy in Canada. That article shows the specific premium differences between elimination period lengths, explains why the benefit period to age 65 is the minimum for meaningful protection, and walks through how to calculate the right benefit amount by coordinating your individual policy with your existing group coverage and CPP.
How to coordinate individual coverage with your group plan
Individual disability insurance should be structured to fill the gaps your group plan leaves, not to duplicate what it provides. The right approach is to identify your group plan’s actual after-tax, after-coordination-of-benefits net benefit, calculate the gap between that and your monthly essential expenses, and structure individual coverage to close that specific gap.
A practical coordination example
Item
Amount
Notes
Pre-disability monthly gross income
$7,500
$90,000/year salary
Group LTD stated benefit (66%)
$4,950
Before tax and CPP coordination
Less: CPP disability benefit (average 2026)
($1,211)
Deducted under all-source maximum
Group LTD actually paid
$3,739
After CPP coordination
Less: income tax (~33% effective rate)
($1,234)
Taxable because employer pays the premium
Group LTD net after-tax income
$2,505
This is what actually arrives in the account
Monthly essential expenses
$5,200
Mortgage, utilities, groceries, childcare, minimums
Monthly coverage gap
$2,695
The amount individual coverage needs to provide
Individual policy benefit required
~$2,700/month
Tax-free when you pay the premium personally: closes the gap precisely
The table above shows the most important insight in individual disability planning. The group plan you have does not determine how much individual coverage you need. Your after-tax, after-coordination net from the group plan determines it. Most Canadians who run this calculation are surprised by how large the gap is. The calculation requires knowing your group plan’s all-source maximum, your CPP contribution history, your effective tax rate, and your actual monthly essential expenses, all of which were covered in Article 2 of this series.
Structuring individual coverage alongside a group plan
When buying individual disability coverage to complement a group plan, structure the elimination period on the individual policy to align with when your group LTD benefits begin, typically 90 to 120 days. This avoids paying for individual STD coverage that duplicates what the group plan already provides for the first few months. A longer elimination period on the individual policy also reduces the premium, which frees budget for a higher monthly benefit or additional riders. Article 4 covers this structuring decision in depth.
Who needs individual disability insurance in Canada?
Most working Canadians who depend on their income to fund a mortgage, support dependents, or service debt need some level of individual disability insurance. The group plan you have may be a good foundation, but for the majority of employed Canadians it leaves a meaningful income gap after tax, benefit coordination, and the 24-month definition shift are accounted for.
Most Canadians with group disability insurance have never calculated what their plan actually pays after tax and benefit coordination. When they run that calculation, the gap between the stated benefit percentage and the real after-tax income replacement is almost always larger than they expected. Individual disability insurance exists to close that specific gap: not to duplicate the group plan, but to fill what it leaves behind.
ProtectYourNest.ca — Individual Disability Insurance in Canada



