How quote comparison will work
The platform launches once KLC Group Canada Inc.’s RIBO registration is granted. Until then, the page below is education only.
Tell us about your driving
A short form on your vehicle, driving history, and current coverage. Available at RIBO-registered launch.
See ranked offers from 30+ carriers
Quote comparison across Ontario's top carriers, ranked by price and coverage. Available at RIBO-registered launch under KLC Group Canada Inc.'s RIBO registration.
Choose & bind
Compare coverage and deductibles side by side and bind online through KLC Group. Today: join the waitlist below for launch notification.
What affects your auto insurance rate in Ontario?
Every carrier weighs these factors differently — which is why comparing quotes matters.
Driving record
Tickets, accidents, and convictions from the past 6 years. Clean records get more competitive pricing.
Location
Your postal code matters. Urban areas like Brampton and Toronto have higher rates than rural Ontario.
Vehicle
Make, model, year, and safety features. Cars that are expensive to repair or commonly stolen cost more to insure.
Age & experience
Young drivers (under 25) and new drivers pay more. Rates typically drop after 6+ years of experience.
Coverage level
Liability limits, collision, comprehensive, and optional add-ons all affect your premium.
Claims history
At-fault claims stay on your record for 6 years. Even not-at-fault claims can affect rates with some carriers.
Ontario auto insurance guides
View all guidesOntario Auto Insurance Changes 2026: Everything You Need to Know
May 4, 2026 · 12 minGUIDEIncome Replacement Benefits: Do You Need Them?
May 11, 2026 · 7 minCOMPARELowest-Premium Car Insurance Territories in Ontario 2026
Jun 5, 2026 · 10 minTOOLSelf-Assessment: Which Optional Benefits Do You Need?
May 22, 2026 · InteractivePERSONASelf-Employed & Gig Workers: Coverage Guide
May 27, 2026 · 6 minREFORMWhat Happens If You're in an Accident After July 1?
Jun 22, 2026 · 8 minReady to compare?
Quote comparison and brokerage launch once KLC Group Canada Inc. completes RIBO registration. Join the launch list to be first when carriers turn on.
What’s changing on July 1, 2026
Ontario’s auto insurance reform restructures the Statutory Accident Benefits Schedule (SABS) — the part of your policy that pays for your own injuries after a crash, regardless of who’s at fault. Today every Ontario auto policy automatically includes a standard package of accident benefits. After July 1, the framework splits coverage into two groups.
Staying mandatory
- Medical and rehabilitation benefits
- Attendant care benefits
Becoming optional
- Income replacement benefits
- Non-earner benefits
- Caregiver benefits
- Housekeeping and home maintenance
- Death and funeral benefits
- Lost educational expenses
- Expenses of visitors
- Damage to clothing, glasses, and other personal items
The provincial rationale is that making these benefits optional lets drivers lower their base premium by declining coverage they may feel they don’t need. The risk is obvious: a driver who opts out to save money may discover, after a serious collision, that they have no income replacement while unable to work.
Should you keep the optional benefits?
There is no universal answer, and anyone who gives you one without knowing your situation is guessing. The honest framework:
- Keep income replacement if you rely on employment income and don’t have robust long-term disability coverage elsewhere.
- Keep caregiver and housekeeping if your household depends on unpaid work you do (childcare, eldercare).
- Reconsider only if you have substantial separate coverage (a strong group benefits plan, significant savings) that already addresses these risks.
Because this is a financial-security decision, it’s exactly the kind of choice worth running past a licensed advisor before your renewal date.
Why GTA drivers pay so much
Greater Toronto Area drivers pay among the highest auto premiums in Canada. Your postal code’s “rating territory” is one of the single biggest factors in your premium — sometimes a larger factor than your driving record. The drivers of that cost are concrete:
Claims frequency and density
More cars in a smaller area means more collisions.
Auto theft
Peel Region (Brampton and Mississauga) has been a national hotspot for vehicle theft, and theft losses get priced into premiums.
Fraud and staged collisions
Historically concentrated in parts of the GTA, raising costs for everyone in the rating territory.
Repair and medical costs
Rising across the board, and reflected in what carriers charge.
Specific situations
Insurers weigh your driving record, years licensed, vehicle, mileage, postal code, coverage, and discounts. A few situations change the picture more than others.
New and G2 drivers
Expect the highest premiums. Driver training, being added to a parent’s policy, and a clean record over time are the legitimate paths down.
High-risk drivers
After serious tickets, at-fault accidents, or a lapse in coverage, you may be placed with a specialty insurer or the Facility Association, Ontario’s insurer of last resort.
Rideshare drivers (Uber, Lyft)
A standard personal policy does not cover commercial rideshare use. You need a rideshare endorsement; driving for hire without it can void a claim.
New to Canada
Bring proof of your driving history from your home country — many insurers give credit for verifiable prior experience, which can meaningfully reduce your rate.
Legitimate ways to lower your rate
- Shop at renewal — loyalty rarely pays; comparing is the single most effective tactic.
- Bundle home/tenant and auto with one insurer.
- Raise your deductible if you have the savings to cover it.
- Usage-based / telematics programs reward safe, low-mileage driving.
- Winter tires earn a mandated discount in Ontario.
- Driver training for new drivers.
- Review coverage annually — an older car may no longer need collision coverage.
Avoid the temptation to misrepresent your address, mileage, or who drives the car. “Address fronting” and similar misrepresentations are fraud and will void your coverage when you need it most.
Frequently asked questions
What changes on July 1, 2026 for Ontario auto insurance?
Several accident benefits — including income replacement, caregiver, housekeeping, death and funeral, and others — become optional. Medical, rehabilitation, and attendant care benefits remain mandatory.
Will my premium go down after the reform?
It may, if you opt out of optional benefits — but you’d be trading a lower premium for less protection. Whether that’s wise depends entirely on your financial situation.
Why is Brampton car insurance so expensive?
A combination of high claims frequency, elevated auto theft in Peel Region, historical fraud concentration, and dense traffic pushes Brampton’s average premium among the highest in Canada.
Does my regular policy cover me when driving for Uber?
No. You need a specific rideshare endorsement. Driving for hire on a personal policy can void your coverage.
I’m new to Canada — can I get a good rate?
Often yes, if you can document driving experience from your home country. Ask insurers what proof they accept.
Can TopRates.ca get me a quote?
Not yet. We’re an educational resource today; quote comparison launches once KLC Group Canada Inc. completes RIBO registration. For now we help you understand your options so you can talk to a licensed broker with confidence.
Educational content only. TopRates.ca is operated by Webhub4u Inc. and is not a licensed insurance broker. For personal advice on your specific situation, consult a licensed insurance broker. KLC Group Canada Inc. plans to register as a RIBO-licensed property and casualty brokerage; until that registration is granted, no P&C insurance is sold or quoted on TopRates.ca.
Get in touch
Auto insurance comparison is planned for 2027 alongside KLC Group Canada Inc.’s RIBO registration. Send us a note and we’ll add you to our list — we’ll reach out when quotes are live.