How to Apply for Long Term Disability Benefits in Ontario – Full Guide

Who Qualifies for Long-Term Disability Benefits in Ontario

The process of filing for long-term disability in Ontario typically starts by confirming whether you have coverage under a group medical plan or an individual long term disability policy, then reading through your insurance policy, verifying the elimination period, filling out claim forms, obtaining medical documentation and filing the application within the timeframe. The position of the LTD claim should be clear and include a form of explanation for the diagnosis, restrictions, limitations and treatment, and why you cannot work due to your medical condition.

Commonly known as LTD benefits, long-term disability benefits are designed to cover a disability or illness that lasts for a long period of time, and that prevents you from doing your job. Typically these benefits are provided through workplace coverage or individual long term disability insurance, or occasionally integrated right into a larger fringe benefits package.

The application process may seem daunting for a lot of people. You can have pain, medical visits, loss of income, pressure from your employer and requests from your insurance carrier at the same time. Knowing what to do early can prevent delays in your disability claim, improve the scope of your disability claim and reduce the chances of your disability claim being denied. Mental illness can also qualify when its effect prevents you from performing your job duties or supporting yourself financially, including conditions such as depression, anxiety, and bipolar disorder.

What Is the Elimination Period?

The waiting period for the start of long-term disability benefits is called the elimination period. You will often have to be disabled for the whole period.

For most Ontario long-term disability plans, the elimination period is usually 90 to 120 days before benefits begin, although some policies use 180 days. The elimination period may start on the date of the disability or the date you were last able to work.

You might be able to receive short-term disability benefits, paid sick leave, Employment Insurance sickness benefits, savings, or other income support during this time.

Prior to submitting a claim for LTD benefits, review your policy for:

  • The length of the elimination period Prior to LTI must be exhausted from short-term disability?
  • Must short-term disability be exhausted first?
  • The order of steps and the deadline to submit LTD forms?

This depends on your employer and/or insurance company.

If benefits are to be paid monthly or they are to be paid back at some point after approval The Government of Canada states that a medical certificate may be needed to receive EI sickness benefits which can cover up to 26 weeks of benefits if a person is not able to work because of illness.

Steps to Apply for Long-Term Disability Benefits

Notify Your Employer or Insurance Provider

Inform your employer, HR department, benefits administrator, or insurance company immediately after you think your illness, injury or disability may keep you from working past the end of the short-term disability benefit period.

By providing early notice, you establish your claims, verify your deadlines, and can ensure you get the proper long-term disability application forms; note that most insurance companies require prompt notice and will provide the necessary forms. Your employer will initiate most workplace LTD plans by filling out the insurer’s claim package.

If you have private disability insurance, you should contact your insurance company.

If you are notifying your employer or insurance provider, request:

  • The notice of claim form required to apply for long-term disability.
  • A copy of your disability insurance policy.
  • The elimination period length.
  • The last day to submit your claim.
  • The medical report form and any other medical forms required by most insurance policies.
  • The medical forms that your GP will need to fill in.
  • How to provide documents that support your response.

You don’t have to tell your employer all the private medical information. But you need to make sure that you are not able to work and that you plan to pursue long-term disability benefits. If you’re interested in similar information about qualifying conditions, check out this article on what conditions are eligible for long-term disability benefits from Grillo Law.

Complete the Application Form Accurately

Your long term disability claim should function as a complete evidence package, not just a set of forms, and it should be complete, consistent and specific. The insurance provider will compare your answers with your medical examination, job duties, employer statement and Insurance Policy. If responses are incorrect or ambiguous, that fact may put your claim on hold or lead the insurance company to refuse payment. Your package should include diagnostic results, specialist reports, and journals documenting your symptoms.

The majority of LTD application packages have 3 primary forms:Applicants can also include a covering letter summarizing attached documents, timelines, and any unique circumstances.

  • Employee statement completed by you. This is the reason for the condition, symptoms, job history, daily limitations, treatments and why you are not able to perform your job duties. Symptom journals can also help prove your restrictions and day-to-day limitations.
  • Employer statement filled out by your employer. This verifies your job title, salary, job responsibilities, final work day, coverage of benefits, and employment details.
  • Attending physician statement completed by the doctor or treating health care provider. This is why you have been diagnosed, what you are not able to do, the treatment you will receive and what you are likely to recover from and what you might be able to do.

Provide Medical Documentation

In the context of an LTD claim, medical documentation may be one of the most critical components. Typically, diagnosis is not sufficient, and for mental health conditions the lack of visible symptoms can make it harder to prove impairment to employers and insurers, so records from your medical providers should be thorough and detailed. Your records should include details of your symptoms, restrictions, limitations, treatment plan, and why your condition makes it impossible to perform the essential duties of your job.

If there is strong medical evidence, it could include:

  • Family doctor records Specialist reports Hospital records MRIs, CT scans, Xrays, or ultrasounds to diagnose the problem.
  • Psychological or psychiatric assessments of the student.
  • Physiotherapy, OT or rehabilitation notes.
  • Medication history.
  • Functional abilities evaluations.

Thorough provider records and a treatment schedule help show ongoing limitations and support recovery tracking.

The insurance company will typically request proof that you are being treated and taking your medications, and may also ask for updated medical evidence to continue benefits, especially in mental health claims. According to the Financial Consumer Agency of Canada, disability insurance is designed to replace income in the event of illness or injury, and provides a percentage of earnings, depending on the insurance policy.

Submit the Claim on Time

Submit all completed forms and supporting evidence to your insurance provider before the policy deadline, often within 30 to 90 days after the elimination period ends. Missing a deadline can lead to denial of benefits or legal complications. Maintain copies of all paperwork, medical records, e-mail correspondence, upload confirmation, fax receipt, courier tracking, and insurance company correspondence.

Prior to filing an LTD claim, please be sure to do the following:

  • All forms are filled out All forms are signed and dated.
  • The attending physician statement was filled out by your doctor.
  • The employer statement was sent by your employer.
  • Your evidence package is complete before submission, medical records are attached, and your claim number is included.
  • You fulfilled the requirements of your policy.
  • You fulfilled the requirements of your policy.
  • You have saved a proof of submission.

Follow Up with Your Insurer

Once you’ve made your claim for LTD benefits, check back with your insurance provider to ensure that your claim was received and that there were no missing documents or medical records. The insurer may also ask you to attend an interview after receiving the claim. Record every phone call, email, letter and request from the insurance company on paper.

Request confirmation from the insurance company:

  • The date that the claim was received.
  • Determine if the file is complete or not.
  • Should more medical records be required: Who will be named to your claim? Who will be named to your claim? If approved, whether monthly benefits will be paid retroactively, when payments will start, and whether any offset applies for other benefits.

Be sure to provide any additional information requested by the insurer and retain copies of any correspondence. If you feel the request is unclear, too general, repetitive, or not relevant to your disability claim, you may want to consult a long-term disability attorney before answering. You may also be asked to apply for CPP Disability or ODSP, since those sources can affect LTD calculations.

Common Challenges During the LTD Application Process

Typical issues when applying for LTD are the lack of medical evidence, the wording of the policy, the delay between the insurance company and the claimant, the insurance company is using a different form, surveillance, pressure to return to work, and disputes regarding whether the claimant is covered by the “own occupation” or “any occupation” criteria.

Typical issues are:

Insufficient Medical Evidence

Insufficient medical evidence is one of the most common reasons long-term disability claims are denied, so if the insurer’s records are not clear as to how your condition makes it impossible to work, then your LTD claim may be denied. This is particularly true with chronic pain, mental health conditions, fatigue-related disorders and conditions that do not necessarily show up on imaging. A clear understanding of the required proof can help. Insurers often apply stricter scrutiny to mental health claims because the condition may not be visible.

Time lagged by the Insurance Company

Others have waited weeks or months and still no word. The insurance company may ask for additional paperwork, provide doctor request forms for you to fill out, follow up or require an independent medical exam. Fights or disagreements regarding work capacity.Conflicts over work capacity.

Many claims are denied because the insurer believes, based on its review, that you can still perform some aspects of your job, return to your own job, do modified duties or do another job. Insurers may also rely on their own medical assessments when reaching that conclusion. This is especially common when the policy changes from the “own occupation” test to the “any occupation” test.

Inconsistent Information

If the employee statement, doctor’s form, employer statement and medical records aren’t consistent, the insurer will be suspicious of your credibility. Consistency is important.

The presentation will include a few case studies of the use of surveillance or social media reviews.

In certain cases of LTD claims, insurance companies may conduct surveillance and/or check social media. Photos, videos, or posts can be taken out of context and used to argue that you are more functional than your medical records suggest.

Denied or Terminated Benefits

If your life insurance policy benefits are rejected or cancelled, carefully review the denial letter and your long term disability policy for the exact reason benefits were denied or terminated. Grillo Law has a helpful guide on what to do if your long-term disability claim is denied. Pre existing condition clauses may block entitlement if the condition existed before coverage started. Seek assistance from Ontario disability lawyers instead of appealing directly to the insurer.

Tips for a Successful LTD Application

A successful LTD application should be detailed, organized, medically supported, and submitted on time. The strongest claims clearly explain your diagnosis, treatment, restrictions, limitations, job duties, and why your medical condition prevents you from working.

To improve your chances of approval:

  1. Read your LTD policy carefullyYour policy explains the definition of disability, the elimination period, deadlines, exclusions, benefit amount, and appeal rights. It also determines when you are totally disabled, not the medical system or the Ontario government, and most policies use an own-occupation test for the first two years before changing to an any-occupation test. The assessment focuses on the restrictions and limitations caused by your injury, illness, or disease, not just the diagnosis, and it may also consider your education, training, and work experience. Benefits often replace 60% to 80% of your income, are usually paid monthly, and the maximum amount is outlined in the policy. Other payments, such as CPP Disability, can reduce what you receive through offsets or an all-source maximum clause. Benefits may continue until age 65 if you remain disabled under the policy for an extended period. Disability payments may also be tax-free if you paid your premiums with after-tax dollars.
  2. Start earlyDo not wait until the elimination period is over. Doctors, employers, and insurers often need time to complete forms.
  3. Be specific about your limitationsExplain what you cannot do, how often symptoms occurred, and how your condition affects work and daily life. Each claim also depends on the nature of the condition and the policy wording.
  4. Provide strong medical evidenceInclude records from your doctor, specialists, therapists, and other treatment providers.
  5. Stay consistentMake sure your forms match your medical records and job duties.
  6. Follow your treatment planAttend appointments, follow medical advice, and document treatment progress.
  7. Keep a claim fileSave copies of all forms, letters, emails, medical records, and insurer communications.
  8. Do not miss deadlinesLTD policies have strict timelines. Missing a deadline can seriously affect your claim.
  9. Get legal advice if the claim is delayed, denied, cut, or terminatedIf the insurer denies your claim, asks for repeated documentation, makes cuts to benefits, or pressures you to return to work, speak with Ontario disability lawyers before taking the next step.

ODSP may provide financial assistance for people living in Ontario without private coverage, and some applicants may need to apply alternatively through public programs while disputes are ongoing.

For more guidance, see Grillo Law’s article on mistakes to avoid when applying for short and long-term disability.

How a Toronto Long-Term Disability Lawyer Can Help

A Toronto long-term disability lawyer can help you understand your policy, prepare your LTD application, gather medical evidence, communicate with the insurer, challenge a denial, and pursue the benefits you may be entitled to receive. Legal help is especially important if your claim is denied, delayed, or terminated.

If your disability was caused by a car accident, slip and fall, workplace incident, or another injury, a lawyer can also help coordinate your LTD claim with other possible claims or benefits. For example, if your injuries arose from a collision, you may also want to review Grillo Law’s article on the major causes of motor vehicle accidents in Toronto and the firm’s car accident lawyer Toronto page.

CALL 1-855-225-5725 for a FREE consultation regarding your accident benefits claim.

Remember, you will not pay any fees until your case is won or settled.

Blog

Recent Articles

Explore all posts
What is contributory negligence? How do contributory negligence defenses work? Determine detauls with defense law

Request a free consultation!

Call us today for a FREE consultation regarding your accident benefits claim.

Call: +1 855-225-5725