Wednesday, May 13, 2026
ADVT 
National

Government expects $140M in savings this year with refugee health care co-pay

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 May, 2026 09:59 AM
  • Government expects $140M in savings this year with refugee health care co-pay

The government estimates that implementing a co-pay from asylum seekers and refugee claimants for some health care services will cut public costs by about $140 million.

To address a soaring price tag for the Interim Federal Health Program, the government introduced the new co-pay on May 1 for supplementary and prescription health coverage.

Claimants will cover a $4 fee for prescriptions and cover 30 per cent of the cost for services not typically covered by the public health care system, such as dental and vision care.

Data provided by the government in response to an order paper question from NDP MP Heather McPherson shows $93 million in savings will come from dental care.

Routine doctor visits and emergency medicine continue to be fully covered by the program. 

A February report from the Parliamentary Budget Officer projected the cost of the program at $1.1 billion for the 2026/27 fiscal year. 

Picture Courtesy: AP Photo/Jenny Kane

MORE National ARTICLES

Carney set to spend much of 2026 travelling the world in search of trade

Carney set to spend much of 2026 travelling the world in search of trade
Mark Carney has been circling the globe on government aircraft since becoming prime minister — part of his efforts to secure new trade links and investment to double non-U.S. exports in the next decade.

Carney set to spend much of 2026 travelling the world in search of trade

Canada's recent dealings with China 'entirely consistent" with CUSMA, Carney says

Canada's recent dealings with China 'entirely consistent
Prime Minister Mark Carney says Ottawa's recent dealings with Beijing are "entirely consistent" with Canada's obligations under its trade agreement with the United States and Mexico. 

Canada's recent dealings with China 'entirely consistent" with CUSMA, Carney says

Vancouver hearing into Myles Gray's death set to resume after obscenity caused delay

Vancouver hearing into Myles Gray's death set to resume after obscenity caused delay
A hearing into the death of Myles Gray, who died in 2015 after a violent altercation with Vancouver police, is set to resume today after it was delayed by an obscene remark that was captured on an audio feed of the proceeding last week.

Vancouver hearing into Myles Gray's death set to resume after obscenity caused delay

Carney announces GST rebate boost to counter high cost of groceries

Carney announces GST rebate boost to counter high cost of groceries
Prime Minister Mark Carney is announcing a 25 per cent hike to the GST credit to help lower-income consumers deal with the high cost of groceries across the country.

Carney announces GST rebate boost to counter high cost of groceries

Carney links Trump's latest tariff threat to negotiations on CUSMA trade pact

Carney links Trump's latest tariff threat to negotiations on CUSMA trade pact
Prime Minister Mark Carney says it's no coincidence U.S. President Donald Trump's latest tariff threat against Canada comes just ahead of negotiations on renewing North America's main free-trade pact.

Carney links Trump's latest tariff threat to negotiations on CUSMA trade pact

Schools closed, commuters face major delays as Toronto digs out after record snowfall

Schools closed, commuters face major delays as Toronto digs out after record snowfall
Schools across the Greater Toronto Area are closed and commuters are facing transit shutdowns and delays following a record-breaking winter storm that left mountains of snow clogging driveways and streets in its wake.

Schools closed, commuters face major delays as Toronto digs out after record snowfall