Provincial Health Card in Canada — OHIP, MSP, AHCIP — how to obtain

The Canadian health card is provincial; the process for obtaining OHIP (Ontario), MSP (BC), AHCIP (Alberta) includes waiting times and costs.

Introduction / Who is eligible

Healthcare in Canada is public and free at the point of use, but managed by provinces. Each province has its own health card (Health Card) — in Ontario OHIP, in BC MSP, in Alberta AHCIP, etc. Without a card, a visit to the doctor is expensive (200+ CAD).

Who qualifies

General requirements (vary by province):

  • Canadian citizens
  • Permanent Residents (PR)
  • Some work permit / study permit holders (depends on the province)
  • Refugees

Tourist visa holders, eTA — NO.

Wait period

Most provinces have a 3-month wait period from settlement — during this time you need private insurance.

  • No wait period: Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Yukon, Newfoundland and Labrador
  • 3-month wait period: Ontario, BC, Alberta, Nova Scotia, Quebec, NB, PEI
  • With travel insurance: purchase for 3 months, ~50-150 CAD/month

Ontario — OHIP

What you need:

  • Photo ID (passport, driver's license)
  • Immigration status document (COPR, PR Card, Work Permit, Study Permit)
  • 2 proofs of address (lease agreement, bills, bank letter)

Procedure:

  1. Book an appointment at ServiceOntario (online or by phone)
  2. Bring original documents
  3. You will be photographed, verified
  4. You will receive your Health Card by mail in 4-8 weeks
  5. Active use after the 3-month wait period

British Columbia — MSP

As of January 2020, MSP is free (previously there were premiums). Procedure:

  1. Go to health.gov.bc.ca
  2. Apply online or by mail
  3. Documents: proof of identity, immigration status, proof of address
  4. Wait period: 3 months (purchase BC International Health Insurance or private)
  5. BC Services Card (combined card) — pick up in person at Service BC after decision

Alberta — AHCIP

AHCIP (Alberta Health Care Insurance Plan) — free for residents. Procedure:

  1. Go to alberta.ca/ahcip
  2. Fill out the application form
  3. Submit in person at a registry agent (local office, not central office)
  4. Wait period: 3 months
  5. You will receive your AHCIP card by mail

Quebec — RAMQ

Specific province:

  • Wait period 3 months
  • French requirement (RAMQ forms in French; service also available in English but French preferred)
  • Photo card — requires a personal visit to the local RAMQ office

What the Health Card covers

  • Visits to family doctors — free
  • Specialist visits (with referral) — free
  • Hospitalizations and surgeries — free
  • Emergency services — free
  • Laboratory and imaging tests (with referral) — free

What the Health Card does NOT cover

  • Prescription medications outside the hospital (unless you are a senior 65+ or in special programs)
  • Adult dental care (children up to 17 usually covered)
  • Optometry and glasses (for adults)
  • Physiotherapy, massage (outside the hospital)
  • Private psychotherapy (public has long wait times)
  • Second opinions outside the province
  • Medical transport to another province

Family Doctor — find a family doctor

After receiving your Health Card, find a Family Doctor:

  • Each province has its own registry (e.g., Ontario: healthcareontario.ca/find-doctor)
  • In large cities, wait times of 2-12 months for new patients
  • Temporarily: walk-in clinic (free with card) or virtual care app (Maple, Telus Health)
  • Polish-speaking doctors in Toronto, Mississauga, Vancouver, Edmonton

Prescription medications

Without drug insurance:

  • Insulin, antibiotics, blood pressure medications — 20-100 CAD/month
  • Specialty medications (chemo, biologics) — expensive
  • Employers often offer a "drug plan" (coverage for medications)
  • Seniors 65+ — usually free (Ontario ODB, BC Fair PharmaCare)
  • Trillium Program (Ontario) — for low-income individuals

Common mistakes

  • Lack of private insurance during the 3-month wait period — emergency visit = 1,000-5,000 CAD
  • Card issued with incorrect name (typo in passport) — denial of services
  • Failure to report address changes — card will not renew automatically
  • Attempting to use in another province without applying for reimbursement (reciprocal billing only partially works)
  • Not opening an account with the employer's "drug plan" during employment

What to do after receiving the Health Card

  • Find a Family Doctor (long wait times — start immediately)
  • Check if you have a drug plan from work
  • Purchase private dental insurance (~30-60 CAD/month) if the employer does not offer it
  • Register family members individually — each has their own card
  • Check "extended health benefits" with your employer

Official sources

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