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AbleCanada

省级收入计划

ODSP、AISH、SAID — 各省比较

Quick Comparison

Monthly amounts for a single person without dependents. These are maximum amounts — actual payments depend on your income and assets.

ProvinceProgramMax Monthly
AlbertaAISH$1,901
QuebecSocial Solidarity~$1,215-$1,780
British ColumbiaDisability Assistance$1,483.50
OntarioODSP$1,408
Prince Edward IslandAssured Income$1,219
ManitobaMB Supports for Persons with Disabilities$1,205
SaskatchewanSAID$991-$1,129
Nova ScotiaIncome Assistance (Extended Benefits)$1,022
New BrunswickIncome Assistance$939
Newfoundland & LabradorIncome Support + NL Disability Benefit$561 + $400

Alberta — AISH

The Assured Income for the Severely Handicapped (AISH) provides up to $1,901/month plus health benefits for the recipient, spouse, and dependent children. Requires a permanent condition that limits ability to earn a living.

  • Asset limits apply
  • Priority processing for terminal/palliative cases
  • Critical: Alberta claws back the $200 CDB dollar-for-dollar from AISH
  • New: Alberta Disability Assistance Program (ADAP) launching July 2026 for those able to work — proposed $1,740/month. Note: fully exempt employment income drops from $1,072/mo (AISH) to $350/mo under ADAP

British Columbia — Disability Assistance

Up to $1,483.50/month plus $16,200 annual earnings exemption. Requires Person with Disability (PWD) designation. RDSP is fully exempt from asset and income tests.

Ontario — ODSP

The Ontario Disability Support Program provides up to $1,408/month for a single person ($809 basic needs + $599 shelter). Includes drug coverage, basic dental, eye exams, and diabetic supplies.

  • Asset limit: $40,000 single, $50,000 couple
  • Employment benefit: $100/month if working; 75% of earnings over $1,000 deducted
  • CDB exempted from income calculations
  • 372,681 average monthly cases (2024-25)

Saskatchewan — SAID

The Saskatchewan Assured Income for Disability provides $991-$1,129/month depending on location. RDSP assets fully exempt; income exempt up to low-income threshold.

Manitoba — Supports for Persons with Disabilities

Up to $1,205/month for a single person. Must be 18+, have a severe and prolonged disability that challenges daily living, and demonstrate financial need.

Quebec — Social Solidarity

For people with severe and prolonged disability limiting employment capacity. Basic benefit ranges from $1,215-$1,780/month (varies by source and circumstances). CDB exempted. Quebec has its own pension system (QPP) separate from CPP.

New Brunswick — Income Assistance

$939/month for single person. No separate disability pension program — disabled residents receive through social assistance. Must be certified by the Provincial Medical Advisory Board.

Nova Scotia — Extended Benefits

Up to $1,022/month for single person with chronic disability (increased Jan 2026). First payment within 2 days of approval. Must be certified as blind, deaf, or disabled.

PEI — Assured Income

Up to $1,219/month for single person. Also offers AccessAbility Supports for personalized disability services.

Newfoundland & Labrador

Income Support of $339-$561/month plus the new NL Disability Benefit (launched July 2025) of up to $400/month for ages 18-64 with the DTC. Also provides $1,200 annual RDSP contribution for qualifying persons.

Territories

  • Northwest Territories: Income Assistance for Seniors and Persons with Disabilities — housing assistance, income support, community services
  • Nunavut: Income Assistance Program for individuals and families including those with disabilities
  • Yukon: Social Assistance plus $250/month supplementary allowance for ages 19-64

Key Things to Know

  • Benefits do NOT transfer between provinces. If you move from Ontario to Alberta, you start over with a new application, new waitlists, and different rules. See our moving provinces guide.
  • The CDB is exempted in most provinces — meaning you keep the full $200/month on top of provincial benefits. The major exception is Alberta, which claws it back from AISH.
  • Apply for the DTC first. The Disability Tax Credit is the gateway to federal benefits and may also speed up provincial applications.
  • Waitlists are long.Apply as early as possible. Some provinces allow you to apply before you've exhausted other benefits.

Use Our Comparison Tool

Want a side-by-side comparison of specific provinces? Try our province comparison tool to see how programs differ.

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