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AbleCanada

Moving from New Brunswick to Newfoundland & Labrador

Here’s what changes for disability benefits and support programs.

What you keep

These federal benefits follow you anywhere in Canada. No need to reapply when you move:

  • Disability Tax Credit (DTC)— your CRA certification carries over.
  • Canada Disability Benefit (CDB)— tied to DTC eligibility, paid by Canada Revenue Agency.
  • Registered Disability Savings Plan (RDSP) — account stays with your bank, government grants and bonds continue.
  • CPP Disability (CPP-D)— federal pension, not affected by province.
  • Child Disability Benefit— tax-free monthly supplement to Canada Child Benefit.

Update your address with CRA and Service Canada within 30 days of your move.

What changes: NB vs NL

Leaving behind

New Brunswick

Adult income support
$939/mo
Income Assistance
Asset limit
Income assistance limits apply
Earnings exemption
Standard assistance exemptions
Autism (under 6)
Preschool Autism Program (EIBI)
Autism (6-18)
CBSCSN (to age 19)
Health benefits
Medicare; supplementary through assistance
Home care
Disability Support Program for adults
Respite
Family Supports for Children with Disabilities
Assistive devices
Social Development programs
Waitlist severity
Moderate
Apply for

Newfoundland & Labrador

Adult income support
$561/mo + $400/mo NL Disability Benefit
Income Support + NLDB
Asset limit
Income Support eligibility
Earnings exemption
Standard exemptions
Autism (under 6)
Provincial services
Autism (6-18)
Provincial services
Health benefits
NLPDP drug coverage; supplementary health
Home care
Provincial home support services
Respite
Through disability services
Assistive devices
Provincial medical equipment programs
Waitlist severity
Moderate

What to do

Before you move

  • Notify Income Assistance that you're leaving the province (avoids overpayment recovery later).
  • Request copies of your medical records, diagnostic reports, and any assessment documents.
  • Print or save any approval letters from provincial programs — you may need them for the new province.
  • Research waitlists in your destination so you can apply early.

Week 1 in your new province

  • Update your address with CRA and Service Canada (DTC, CDB, RDSP, CPP-D, Child Disability Benefit).
  • Register for the new province's health card (most have a 90-day waiting period — keep your old card valid until then).
  • Apply for Income Support + NLDB — bring proof of disability, identification, and income documents.

First month

  • Apply for autism, developmental, or disability-specific funding programs in the new province.
  • Get on waitlists for assistive devices, respite, and home care programs (these can be long).
  • Find a new family doctor or pediatrician — many provinces have shortages.

First three months

  • Connect with local disability organizations for community support and advocacy help.
  • Review your RDSP — your account stays the same but you may want to update your beneficiary address.
  • If you receive CPP-D, your monthly payment is unchanged but your provincial top-ups may differ.

Find help in Newfoundland & Labrador

Browse local disability services and support organizations in your new province: