Quick Answer
The "cheapest" Canadian pet insurance is usually an accident-only plan or a comprehensive plan at the lowest reimbursement tier (often 70%) with a high deductible. Pets Plus Us offers the most flexibility to dial premium down through plan choices. But chasing the cheapest premium is the most common mistake new buyers make — low-tier plans often have annual caps so low they fail exactly when you need them. Read this before shopping on price alone.
The honest answer
Monthly premium is the wrong primary metric. What matters is cost per dollar of coverage — and the cheapest plans are usually the worst on this measure.
A $25/month plan that caps out at $2,500/year fails when you need it most (cancer, complex surgery, ongoing chronic disease). The $55/month plan that pays out $20,000 on the same event is actually cheaper per dollar of risk transferred.
How to actually get a lower premium
If your goal is to genuinely reduce the monthly cost, the legitimate levers are:
1. Raise the deductible
Higher deductibles directly lower premiums. If you have an emergency fund, going from a $200 to a $700 deductible can drop your premium significantly — and you're still covered for the catastrophic events.
2. Lower the reimbursement rate
Most insurers offer 70%, 80%, or 90% tiers. Dropping from 90% to 80% saves on premium but increases your share of every bill. Don't drop below 80% — the difference becomes meaningful on five-figure bills.
3. Skip the wellness add-on
Wellness coverage rarely "pays for itself" mathematically — the math is roughly break-even. If you'd rather save the premium and pay for routine care out of pocket, drop the add-on.
4. Choose an annual rather than per-condition deductible
Annual structures are often cheaper monthly, though per-condition deductibles can be cheaper over the long term for chronic conditions.
5. Insure while young
Premiums rise with age. Locking in a policy at 6 months gets you a lower starting point that compounds over the pet's life.
What "cheap" plans typically sacrifice
| Cost-cutting choice | What you give up |
|---|---|
| Accident-only coverage | All illness coverage (cancer, diabetes, infections, etc.) — illness is statistically more expensive |
| 70% reimbursement | You pay 30% of every eligible bill |
| Low annual cap (e.g. $2,500) | Cap exhausts on a single major event |
| High deductible without savings | You can't actually use the policy in an emergency |
| Excluded hereditary conditions | Major exclusions for the things breed-prone pets are most likely to develop |
When "cheapest" is actually the right question
You're better off shopping primarily on price if:
- You just need accident-only coverage as a financial backstop (older pet, low-risk lifestyle)
- You have substantial savings and only want a catastrophic-only ceiling
- You already maintain a strong emergency fund and insurance is a small add-on
For everyone else, shopping on coverage quality matters more than shopping on premium.
The cheapest comprehensive plans, ranked qualitatively
Pricing varies by postal code, breed, age, and deductible — so any "cheapest" ranking is approximate. Generally:
- Pets Plus Us — most plan flexibility, can be dialed to a low premium via deductible + reimbursement tier choices
- Petsecure — competitive comprehensive base plan, especially mid-tier
- Petline — competitive pricing, broad availability
- Trupanion — typically the highest-premium option (and the highest coverage ceiling)
Get quotes from at least three insurers for your specific pet — premium differences for the same coverage level can be substantial.
Our recommendation
If budget is genuinely the binding constraint, shop comprehensive plans at the 80% reimbursement tier with a moderate deductible rather than dropping to accident-only or 70%. That gets you most of the financial protection at a meaningful premium discount.
Then check our worth-it framework — if the cheap-tier premium is still painful, self-insurance with a savings account might actually be the right answer for your situation.