Decision Guide

Pre-existing conditions and Canadian pet insurance: what to actually expect

Last reviewed : May 28, 2026

Quick Answer

No Canadian pet insurer covers pre-existing conditions. If your pet was diagnosed with, treated for, or showing symptoms of a condition before your policy started — including during the waiting period — that condition is excluded for the life of the policy. There are limited exceptions for "curable" conditions that have been symptom-free for 12+ months at some insurers, but the safe planning assumption is: anything documented before enrollment is excluded.

What counts as pre-existing

Insurers use a broad definition. A condition is typically considered pre-existing if, before your policy effective date or during a waiting period:

That last one matters. Vet notes like "owner reports occasional limping" can be enough to exclude a future cruciate or arthritis claim, even if no formal diagnosis was made.

Why insurers do this

Pet insurance, like all insurance, prices the risk of future unknown events. If a condition is already in progress, it's no longer a risk — it's a certainty. Covering pre-existing conditions would mean insurers paying out predictably for every new policy, which would make the product unaffordable for everyone.

This is universal across the industry. There is no Canadian insurer that covers pre-existing conditions in the way the marketing of "comprehensive coverage" might suggest.

"Curable" vs "incurable" — the only meaningful exception

Some Canadian insurers distinguish between:

Petsecure, Pets Plus Us, and Trupanion handle this differently. Read each policy's specific definition of pre-existing — it's the single most important section of the document.

Bilateral exclusions: the trap most owners miss

Many insurers treat paired body parts as one condition. If your dog ruptured one cruciate ligament before enrollment, the other knee can also be excluded — because both are considered the same condition.

Same logic applies to:

Confirm with your specific insurer whether bilateral exclusions apply to you. If your pet has an existing one-sided issue, this is a major consideration in choosing a policy.

What this means practically

  1. Enrol while your pet is young and healthy. The earlier you enrol, the fewer things will be pre-existing.
  2. Get a thorough vet exam right before enrolling. Then enrol. Anything diagnosed after the policy starts is covered (subject to waiting periods); anything diagnosed before is excluded forever.
  3. Don't switch insurers casually. If you switch, every condition diagnosed under your previous policy is pre-existing on the new one. You essentially restart at a worse position.
  4. Document everything. If you ever need to dispute a pre-existing exclusion, you'll want clear records of when symptoms first appeared.

What about the waiting period?

The waiting period (typically 2–30 days depending on condition type) is part of the pre-existing definition. A condition that develops during the waiting period is treated as pre-existing. This is why insurers don't sell coverage that starts immediately — they need a buffer against people enrolling for a current problem.

If you have an older pet or a pet with documented conditions

Insurance is still often worth considering — but with realistic expectations:

For an older pet, get quotes anyway. A capped, accident-only, or comprehensive-with-exclusions policy may still be worth the monthly premium for the events you can't predict.