Quick Answer
Comprehensive Canadian pet insurance covers most accidents and illnesses, but excludes pre-existing conditions, cosmetic procedures, breeding-related care, routine and preventive care (unless you have a wellness add-on), and several specific items most policies share. The exclusions that catch people off guard most often: bilateral conditions, behavioural treatment, and anything diagnosed during the waiting period.
Universal exclusions (every Canadian insurer)
1. Pre-existing conditions
The biggest exclusion. Anything diagnosed, treated, or showing symptoms before your policy started — or during the waiting period — is permanently excluded. See our full pre-existing conditions guide.
2. Cosmetic procedures
- Ear cropping
- Tail docking
- Dewclaw removal (non-medically necessary)
- Declawing (where legal)
3. Breeding-related care
- Pregnancy and whelping
- Caesarean sections
- Fertility treatments
- Costs related to producing or selling offspring
4. Routine and preventive care
Unless you have a wellness add-on, these are excluded:
- Annual checkups and exams
- Vaccinations
- Parasite prevention (flea, tick, heartworm)
- Dental cleaning (unless medically necessary)
- Spay and neuter (unless medically necessary)
- Microchipping
- Grooming and nail trimming
5. Behavioural treatment
Most policies exclude treatment for anxiety, aggression, separation issues, and other behavioural conditions. Some exceptions for conditions with a clear medical cause.
6. Boarding, grooming, and non-medical services
7. Food, supplements, and prescription diets
Unless prescribed for an eligible medical condition — even then, often partially covered or capped.
Exclusions that trip people up
Bilateral conditions
Many insurers treat paired body parts (hips, elbows, knees, eyes, ears) as a single condition. If one knee ruptured before enrollment, the other knee can be excluded too.
Waiting-period diagnoses
Anything diagnosed during the waiting period (typically 14–30 days for illness) is treated as pre-existing. This is why you can't enrol the day after a bad vet visit.
Hereditary conditions on basic plans
Most comprehensive Canadian plans cover hereditary and congenital conditions, but a few cheaper "essentials" tiers exclude them. Read carefully if you're shopping the cheapest tier.
Alternative therapies
Acupuncture, chiropractic, physiotherapy, hydrotherapy may or may not be covered depending on the insurer. Some include them in comprehensive plans; some require a wellness add-on; some exclude entirely.
Specific exotic procedures
Stem cell therapy, certain cancer treatments at specialty centres, experimental treatments — sometimes excluded or capped. Check your policy's specific list.
Bilateral cruciate clarification
Worth its own callout: if your dog has one cruciate already injured (even just "owner reports occasional limping" in the chart), expect the other knee to be excluded too. This is the single most common surprise exclusion for Lab, Golden, and Rottweiler owners.
How to actually read a policy
Open the policy wording PDF (not the marketing page) and search specifically for:
- "Exclusions" — the main list
- "Pre-existing" — the definition
- "Waiting period" — what counts as pre-existing during this window
- "Bilateral" — does it apply, and to which conditions
- "Hereditary" or "congenital" — confirm coverage
- "Wellness" or "preventive" — what's covered if you have the add-on, what's not
Five minutes with the actual policy document tells you more than an hour of marketing pages.
The bottom line
Comprehensive Canadian pet insurance covers most expensive things you'd hope it covers — surgeries, cancer treatment, emergency hospitalization, ongoing illness management. It does not cover routine care, things already wrong with your pet, or behavioural issues. Going in with realistic expectations saves a lot of frustration when a claim is denied.