Canadian patient preparing to travel abroad for surgery

The Wait-Time Reality in Canada

Canada’s public health system is one of the country’s defining institutions — and also one of its most frustrating. For medically necessary emergencies, care is excellent and universally funded. For planned, scheduled procedures, the story is very different.

The Fraser Institute’s annual Waiting Your Turn report has tracked median wait times between GP referral and treatment by a specialist for more than three decades. The most recent editions have reported a national median wait of more than six months, with even longer delays for orthopedic procedures such as hip and knee replacement, as well as for cataract surgery, bariatric surgery, spine surgery, and many outpatient diagnostic tests. The Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI) similarly publishes wait-time benchmarks by province and procedure, and across much of the country they are routinely missed.

Median wait (GP → treatment)

Several months, nationwide — longer for orthopedic and elective procedures

Hip & knee replacement

Benchmark commonly missed in multiple provinces

Cataract surgery

Long waits in several provinces, despite short procedure time

Bariatric surgery

Multi-year pathways with supervised programs and assessments

For patients living in pain, losing mobility, or watching their vision deteriorate, “wait your turn” is not a neutral phrase. It has real costs: lost work, progression of disease, stronger medication dependence, and reduced quality of life. That is the environment in which international medical tourism has become a serious option for thousands of Canadians every year.


Why Canadians Travel Abroad for Surgery

Canadian medical travellers are motivated by a mix of factors, almost always rooted in the wait-time gap:

Popular destinations for Canadian medical travellers include:

🇲🇽 Mexico 🇨🇷 Costa Rica 🇨🇴 Colombia 🇹🇭 Thailand 🇹🇷 Turkey 🇩🇴 Dominican Republic 🇵🇦 Panama 🇰🇷 South Korea 🇰🇷 Hungary 🇮🇳 India

Each destination has a speciality profile — Mexico for bariatric, dental and cosmetic surgery; Costa Rica for dental and orthopedic work; Colombia for cosmetic procedures; Thailand and India for major surgery at tertiary-care hospitals; Turkey for hair transplants, dental, and cosmetic surgery.


The Provincial Plan Trap: What Your Public Plan Actually Covers

Canada’s health system is organised at the provincial and territorial level. Each province administers its own health-insurance plan under the Canada Health Act framework, including:

Provincial plans do not pay for elective surgery performed outside Canada. Out-of-country coverage under every provincial plan is designed for emergency medically necessary care, is capped at very low per-diem and professional-fee rates, and is not intended to cover planned or elective procedures. Patients travelling abroad for scheduled surgery are, in effect, paying privately — and taking on the full financial risk if something goes wrong.

That is the first gap. There is a second gap that fewer Canadians plan for: care after you return home.

What happens if you develop a complication after flying back to Canada?

The short answer is: it depends on the province, the nature of the complication, and where you seek care. A few principles apply across the country:

In plain terms: a Canadian who has a gastric sleeve in Mexico, hip replacement in Costa Rica, cataract surgery in Panama, or a hair transplant in Turkey is often on their own financially if anything goes wrong — whether abroad or during follow-up at home.


How Medical Travel Complication Insurance Closes the Gap

Medical travel complication insurance is a distinct category of insurance from the “travel medical” plans Canadians are used to buying for vacations. Travel medical plans are designed for unexpected illness or injury — a heart attack on a beach, a broken leg on a ski hill — and almost always exclude planned or elective surgery and any complications that arise from it.

Medical travel complication insurance is built specifically for patients travelling to have a planned procedure. Its role is to cover the financial consequences when a covered complication occurs.

What medical travel complication insurance plans typically cover

What these plans do not do

The exact benefits, limits, waiting periods, and exclusions vary by plan and by your residency, destination and procedure — always review the policy certificate before you travel.

Want a plan that fits your province, destination and procedure? Request a personalized quote or chat with Ava for answers specific to your situation.


Procedures Canadians Most Often Travel For

Hip and Knee Replacement

Orthopedic surgery is the single largest driver of Canadian medical travel. Long domestic waits, severe pain, and the high cost of private clinics in Canada push many patients to Mexico, Costa Rica, Thailand, India and elsewhere. Complication risks include deep vein thrombosis (DVT), infection, implant loosening or dislocation, and post-operative stiffness. See our full guide: Hip and Knee Replacement Abroad Insurance.

Cataract and Refractive Eye Surgery

Cataract surgery waits in Canada can stretch well beyond medically recommended timeframes. Refractive eye surgery (LASIK, PRK, SMILE) is not typically covered by any public plan. Many Canadians combine the two with trips to Mexico, Turkey, and India. Complication risks include endophthalmitis, posterior capsule opacification, dry eye, and refractive error. See: LASIK Eye Surgery Abroad Insurance.

Bariatric Surgery

Publicly funded bariatric pathways in most provinces are multi-year processes with strict eligibility. Many Canadians seek gastric sleeve or bypass abroad, particularly in Mexico. Complications are uncommon but serious — anastomotic leak, DVT, and nutritional deficiencies. See: Bariatric Surgery Abroad Insurance.

Cosmetic and Reconstructive Surgery

Cosmetic procedures are not publicly funded, which is why Canadians pay privately in Canada or travel internationally. Colombia, Mexico, Turkey, and the Dominican Republic are major destinations. Common complications include seroma/hematoma, infection, wound dehiscence, fat embolism (BBL), and unsatisfactory cosmetic results requiring revision. See: Cosmetic Surgery Abroad Insurance.

Dental Tourism

Major dental work — implants, full-mouth rehabilitation, All-on-4, veneers — is expensive in Canada and not covered by provincial plans. Mexico, Costa Rica, Hungary, and Turkey are leading destinations. Risks include peri-implantitis, failed integration, infection, and bite/occlusion problems. See: Dental Tourism Insurance.

Fertility Treatment (IVF)

IVF funding in Canada varies by province, and many couples pay privately. International cycles can be less expensive and more accessible. Complication risks include ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS), infection, and ectopic pregnancy. See: IVF Abroad Insurance.

Spine Surgery and Other Orthopedic Procedures

Spine surgery, shoulder reconstructions, and other orthopedic operations are increasingly being performed internationally for Canadian patients, often at tertiary hospitals in Asia or specialty clinics in Latin America.


Choosing the Right Coverage as a Canadian

When comparing medical travel complication insurance as a Canadian resident, focus on these factors:


A Practical Pre-Travel Checklist for Canadian Patients


Frequently Asked Questions

Does OHIP (or my provincial plan) cover surgery I get abroad?

Generally, no. Provincial plans such as OHIP, RAMQ, MSP, AHCIP, MSI, MCP and others do not pay for elective or planned surgery performed outside Canada. Out-of-country coverage for emergencies is extremely limited and is not intended for planned elective procedures.

If I have a complication after I fly home, will my provincial plan cover it?

It depends on the province and the care required. Emergency medically necessary care in public hospitals is generally covered. Private-clinic follow-up, revision surgery, imaging and specialist care tied to an elective foreign procedure are often not covered. Provincial wait times for publicly funded follow-up can also be long — which is why many patients pay for private care. Medical travel complication insurance is designed to fill exactly this gap.

Can Canadians actually buy medical travel complication insurance?

Yes. Coverage is available to Canadian residents travelling internationally for planned elective procedures. Eligibility, pricing and benefits depend on the plan, your destination and procedure. Request a quote and read the policy certificate for details.

Is this the same as “travel medical” insurance?

No. Standard travel medical insurance is for unexpected illness or injury during a trip and typically excludes elective, cosmetic, or non-emergency surgical procedures — and any complications arising from them. Medical travel complication insurance is a separate category purpose-built for patients travelling to have a planned procedure.

Does having private health insurance in Canada change things?

Private Canadian insurance (employer, group, or individual) is typically designed to supplement provincial coverage. It usually does not cover elective surgery performed abroad or complications arising from it. Check the policy wording carefully — and in most cases, specialised medical travel complication insurance is still required for the procedure-complication risk.

My clinic offers a “warranty” or “complication guarantee.” Is that enough?

Clinic warranties usually cover only specific scenarios at that facility (e.g., redoing a procedure within a certain window). They typically do not cover hospitalisation elsewhere, evacuation, specialist care, companion expenses, or care after you return to Canada. A clinic warranty and medical travel complication insurance solve different problems.

Will my provincial plan reimburse any of the cost if I pay out of pocket abroad?

For elective procedures obtained on the patient’s own initiative, reimbursement is usually denied or limited to very small emergency amounts that fall far short of actual costs. Do not rely on provincial reimbursement when planning an international elective procedure.


The Bottom Line for Canadians

Travelling abroad for a planned procedure can be a completely reasonable choice for a Canadian frustrated by wait times, priced out by domestic private options, or seeking a specific procedure not easily available at home. The savings can be meaningful and the outcomes at reputable facilities are often excellent.

But the financial risk of a complication is not covered by your provincial plan, not covered by most private Canadian insurance, and not covered by standard travel medical insurance. The one category of insurance designed for exactly this risk is medical travel complication insurance — which covers care abroad, emergency evacuation, and complications that present after you return home.

If you are planning international surgery in the next 12 months, put coverage in place before you book your flight.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute insurance, medical, or financial advice. Provincial health-plan coverage rules are complex and change over time — always confirm current rules with your provincial Ministry of Health before making medical decisions. Coverage terms, conditions, and availability of medical travel complication insurance are subject to the policy certificate issued by the underwriter. Avia provides insurance brokerage services only. Always review your full policy documents and consult a licensed healthcare provider regarding medical decisions before traveling.