Decision Guide

Pet insurance deductibles, in plain English

Last reviewed : May 28, 2026

Quick Answer

The deductible is what you pay out of pocket before the insurer reimburses anything. Canadian insurers use one of two structures: annual (pay once per policy year, used by most providers) or per-condition (pay once per condition for the lifetime of the policy, used by Trupanion). Higher deductible = lower monthly premium. For most owners with an emergency fund, a moderate-to-higher deductible is the right call.

The two deductible structures

Annual deductible (most Canadian insurers)

You pay the deductible once per policy year, then the insurer reimburses eligible bills at your reimbursement rate (typically 70%, 80%, or 90%) until the policy year ends. Then it resets.

Example: $500 annual deductible, 80% reimbursement, a $4,000 surgery bill in March:

If you then have another $2,000 bill in November (same policy year):

The deductible is already paid for the year — second bill is just the co-pay.

Per-condition deductible (Trupanion)

You pay the deductible once per medical condition, for the lifetime of the policy. Once paid for a specific condition, you never pay it again for that condition.

Example: $500 per-condition deductible, 90% reimbursement, hip dysplasia diagnosed:

For chronic or recurring conditions, per-condition deductibles compound in your favour over time.

Which structure is better?

It depends on your pet's likely health trajectory:

Annual Per-condition
Simple to understand and budget
Better for one-off catastrophic events
Better for chronic / recurring conditions
Resets every policy year
Becomes cheaper over time
You always know your maximum out-of-pocket

If your pet develops a chronic condition (allergies, arthritis, diabetes), per-condition mathematically wins after year 2. If your pet has one major event then years of nothing, annual is simpler and usually cheaper for the catastrophic year.

Choosing the dollar amount

Most Canadian insurers offer deductibles like $100, $200, $500, $700, $1,000.

Lower deductible ($100–$200):

Moderate deductible ($500–$700):

Higher deductible ($1,000+):

The most common mistake

Choosing the lowest deductible because it "feels safer." Result: higher premiums for years, paid out as small reimbursements on routine illnesses that wouldn't have bankrupted you anyway.

The point of insurance is catastrophic protection. A moderate-to-higher deductible focuses the policy on the events that matter while keeping monthly cost manageable.

Practical recommendation

For most Canadian owners with at least a small emergency fund:

This setup keeps premiums reasonable, covers the catastrophic tail, and doesn't fritter away premium on small claims you could absorb yourself.