What the deductible is—and isn’t
If you sue for pain and suffering (non-pecuniary damages) after a motor-vehicle accident in Ontario, your award is subject to a statutory deductible unless it exceeds a moving monetary threshold.
Both numbers are indexed each January 1 by FSRA[1] using the Canada Consumer Price Index[2] or “CPI” (September-to-September).
For January 1–December 31, 2025, the monetary threshold is $155,965.54 and the deductible is $46,790.05; Family Law Act s. 61(2)(e) claims have a $77,982.13 threshold and $23,395.04 deductible (FSRA, 2025 Indexation Guidance, Appendix 1–2) (FSRA 2025 Guidance)[3].
The authority to publish and index these figures comes from the Insurance Act s. 267.5(8.5) [4] and O. Reg. 461/96 s. 5.1[5].
To even get to non-pecuniary damages, a plaintiff must clear the statutory verbal threshold (permanent serious impairment of an important physical, mental or psychological function). That test is in s. 267.5(5) of the Insurance Act[6] and has been the battleground for decades[7].
Where the deductible came from (and how governments changed it)
Ontario introduced a statutory deductible during the 1990s auto-reform era. I was a young lawyer on Bay Street during this time and recently wrote a blog about those transformative years, “Policy, Practice, and the Potholes in Between: A Mediator’s Firsthand Journey Through 35 Years of Ontario Auto Insurance Reform”[8].
In 1990, Ontario introduced the Ontario Motorist Protection Plan, which created the statutory verbal threshold restricting who could recover for motor vehicle injuries, though it did not yet impose a deductible.
Under Bill 164 (1994) the deductible was $10,000, then Bill 59 (1996) increased it to $15,000.
In 2003, the Regulation was amended to $30,000 (and $15,000 for Family Law Act claims), applicable to accidents on/after October 1, 2003; see historical version of O. Reg. 461/96 s. 5.1 stating “the amount of $30,000 is prescribed” (O. Reg. 461/96 – v2).
In 2015, the government tied the deductible and the threshold to annual CPI indexation and raised them going forward (O. Reg. 221/15)[9].
FSRA now publishes the updated numbers each year; 2025’s indexation rate is 1.6% (FSRA 2025 Guidance)[10].
What the appellate courts have said about applying it
The Court of Appeal’s Cobb v. Long Estate, 2017 ONCA 717[11]and El-Khodr v. Lackie, 2017 ONCA 716[12]decisions cemented how deductibles and collateral-benefit set-offs are applied to modern jury verdicts.
In Cobb, a jury’s non-pecuniary award of $50,000 was subject to the deductible of the day, slashing the recovery and, together with collateral-benefit deductions, drastically reducing the judgment[13].
El-Khodr dealt with how to match and deduct SABs against tort awards, read alongside Cadieux v. Cloutier, 2018 ONCA 903[14]. See my recent Substack, SABs, Silos, and the End of “Apples to Apples”: Lessons from Cadieux.
Bottom line: even “successful” plaintiffs can see general damages reduced to nil if the award sits below the deductible figure applicable at the time of judgment.
Today’s numbers and the trajectory to $50,000
For 2025, the deductible is $46,790.05 (no deductible if the non-pecuniary award tops $155,965.54). Family Law Act numbers are $23,395.04 and $77,982.13, respectively (FSRA 2025 Guidance)[15].
When will the deductible cross $50,000?
Each year FSRA adjusts the deductible based on inflation measured from September to September. If inflation stays close to the Bank of Canada’s 2% target[16], the current $46,790 deductible will rise to about $50,000 by 2029. With the lower 1.6% rate used for 2025, it would reach $50,000 around 2030. In short, the deductible is in the high-$40,000s now and will likely cross into the $50,000s by the end of the decade unless inflation changes significantly.
A sober reality check for settlement strategy
Two hard truths flow from the regime:
- Below-threshold wins can still feel like losses once the deductible is applied, as Cobb makes painfully clear for jury trials[17].
- The deductible is climbing every January with CPI. With FSRA’s indexation formula and the Bank of Canada’s 2% midpoint goal, expect a deductible over $50,000 by 2029 (or ~2030 at a 1.6% path), absent a material shock to the economy.
That’s the landscape mediators and counsel have to navigate: push for evidence that moves the case over the threshold and, where warranted, over the threshold number—or recognize that below-threshold valuations will be discounted by tens of thousands of dollars before ink hits judgment.
1. https://www.fsrao.ca/
2. https://www.statcan.gc.ca/en/subjects-start/prices_and_price_indexes/consumer_price_indexes
3. https://www.fsrao.ca/industry/auto-insurance/regulatory-framework/guidance-auto-insurance/2025-automobile-insurance-indexation-amounts-guidance
4. https://www.ontario.ca/laws/statute/90i08
5. https://www.ontario.ca/laws/regulation/960461
6. https://www.ontario.ca/laws/statute/90i08
7. https://www.oba.org/motor-vehicle-personal-injury-claims-and-small-claims-court-important-lessons-about-the-deductible/
8. https://pateymediations.com/policy-practice-and-the-potholes-in-between/
9. https://canadianunderwriter.ca/news/claims/no-fault-deductibles-in-ontarios-insurance-act-in-tort-claims-for-auto-accidents-amended/
10. https://www.fsrao.ca/industry/auto-insurance/regulatory-framework/guidance-auto-insurance/2025-automobile-insurance-indexation-amounts-guidance
11. https://www.canlii.org/en/on/onca/doc/2017/2017onca717/2017onca717.html?resultId=892f9de059e44d5facf4fc2fbda5d2fe&searchId=2025-08-19T04:19:02:839/61a5bc2ba8134bd7904d6295762fdc54
12. https://www.canlii.org/en/on/onca/doc/2017/2017onca716/2017onca716.html?resultId=c47c894715b94d03a6feeab8580d7ce4&searchId=2025-08-19T04:20:55:004/2d49ba16e9a24697aa3008a1f67442b4
13. https://canliiconnects.org/en/summaries/46727
14. https://www.canlii.org/en/on/onca/doc/2018/2018onca903/2018onca903.html?resultId=e8092f2148f446e197b11d089f692c61&searchId=2025-08-19T04:31:46:877/79500cf4926b4bb2aef452f3c8e7c0cc
15. https://www.fsrao.ca/industry/auto-insurance/regulatory-framework/guidance-auto-insurance/2025-automobile-insurance-indexation-amounts-guidance
16. https://www.bankofcanada.ca/core-functions/monetary-policy/inflation/
17. https://canliiconnects.org/en/summaries/46727