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AbleCanada
GuidesOctober 14, 20256 min read

Disability Benefits for Newcomers to Canada

If you've recently immigrated to Canada with a disability, here's what benefits you can access, residency requirements, and how to start.

Navigating Canada's disability benefit system is complex for anyone — for newcomers, there are additional barriers including residency requirements, unfamiliar systems, and sometimes language challenges. Here's a guide to help you get started.

Federal Benefits: Residency Requirements

Disability Tax Credit (DTC): - Available to Canadian residents for tax purposes - No minimum residency period — you can apply as soon as you file a Canadian tax return - Requires a Canadian medical practitioner to complete Part B

Canada Disability Benefit (CDB): - Must have DTC approval - Must file a Canadian tax return - Income-tested based on Canadian tax return

RDSP: - Must have a Social Insurance Number (SIN) - Must have DTC approval - Must be a Canadian resident - Available to permanent residents and citizens

CPP Disability: - Requires CPP contributions through Canadian employment - Minimum contribution period: 4 of the last 6 years - Newcomers likely won't have enough contributions initially

Provincial Benefits: Residency Requirements

Provincial disability programs typically require: - Residency in the province (some require 3+ months) - Legal status in Canada (permanent residency or citizenship) - Some require provincial health card

Ontario ODSP: Must be an Ontario resident. No minimum residency period but must be legally authorized to work in Canada.

Alberta AISH: Must be an Alberta resident. Must be a Canadian citizen, permanent resident, or have Convention Refugee status.

British Columbia PWD: Must be a BC resident. Must have lived in BC for the immediately preceding 12 months or have intent to stay.

Getting Started

Immediate Steps: 1. Apply for a Social Insurance Number (SIN) — needed for all benefits 2. Register for provincial health insurance 3. File a Canadian tax return (even if you had no income — this establishes you in the system) 4. Find a family doctor who can help with DTC applications

Within First Year: 1. Apply for the DTC if your disability is severe and prolonged 2. Research your province's disability programs 3. Connect with settlement organizations that have disability support 4. Explore your province's assistive devices program

Language Support

  • Settlement organizations often provide interpretation services
  • Some disability organizations have multilingual staff
  • CRA offers services in English and French; some materials in other languages
  • Provincial programs may have translation resources

Organizations That Can Help

Search our directory for: - Immigrant and refugee serving organizations with disability support - Disability organizations with multilingual services - Community health centres serving newcomer populations - Legal clinics specializing in disability and immigration

Important Considerations

  • International medical assessments may not be accepted for Canadian programs — you'll likely need Canadian medical documentation
  • Disability definitions may differ from your home country
  • Some countries have social security agreements with Canada that may affect CPP eligibility
  • If you're sponsoring family members with disabilities, understand the financial implications