9 Ways to Get More Life Insurance Coverage (even with Pre-Existing Conditions)

health condition

Getting life insurance with a pre-existing condition can feel frustrating. As if dealing with health issues wasn’t challenging enough by itself, insurance options often come with additional constraints – coverage may be limited, premiums higher, and approvals less predictable. The good news is that this situation is common – and there are well-established ways to improve your options.

In reality, life insurance outcomes depend not just on your health, but also on how, when, and where you apply. With the right strategy, many applicants can qualify for significantly better coverage than they initially expect.

Below are nine practical ways to improve your eligibility and get more value from your life insurance. But first, let’s look at the general factors at play.

Why coverage is limited & how to work around it

Life insurance is based on underwriting – the process insurers use to assess risk and determine pricing. They look at your health, lifestyle, age, and medical history to decide what coverage they can offer and at what cost.

From the insurer’s perspective, the goal is to manage risk. If you have a pre-existing condition, insurers may adjust application criteria to manage that risk, e.g.

  • limit coverage amounts
  • increase premiums
  • offer only simplified or guaranteed policies

This is why no-medical policies exist – they are designed to accept higher-risk applicants. The trade-off is higher premiums and lower coverage, but also waiting periods because the insurer has less medical information upfront.

Policy types and coverage limits

When it comes to life insurance with pre-existing conditions, policy type is the single biggest driver of how much coverage you can access.

In general, the three main types in Canada work as follows:

  • Traditional (fully underwritten) Life Insurance: offers the highest coverage limits – often $500,000 or more – depending on factors such as health, age, and lifestyle, and requires medical tests and a detailed questionnaire.
  • Simplified Issue Life Insurance: mid-range coverage, typically $100,000 to $500,000, with limited health questions and no medical exams.
  • Guaranteed Issue Life Insurance: lowest coverage, typically $5,000 to $50,000, with no health questions and no medical exams.

You can learn more about these differences and typical pricing in our guide to no medical life insurance in Canada.

While factors like timing, stability, and lifestyle all matter, your policy type ultimately sets the ceiling for how much coverage is available in the first place.

Nine ways to qualify for better coverage

1. Choose the right policy type

When choosing a life insurance policy, people often start by aiming for a fully underwritten (traditional) policy, then consider simplified issue options, and only turn to guaranteed issue if needed.

However, in some situations – especially when there are significant health concerns – it may be more practical to begin with a simplified issue policy to secure immediate coverage while exploring better options later.

This approach can also help avoid gaps in coverage while waiting for underwriting decisions. In some cases, applications that are declined may also make future approvals more complex, which is why sequencing applications strategically with the help of a broker can be beneficial.

2. Apply at the right time

Timing matters more than most applicants realize. If moments like a diagnosis, hospitalization or medication change often feel dramatic to the person themselves, they also affect how insurers assess your application.

Waiting until your condition stabilizes – even 6-24 months – can open the door to better policies.

3. Demonstrate stability

Insurers don’t just look at what condition you have – they look at how well it’s managed.

Favourable signals include:

  • Stable test results
  • No recent complications
  • Consistent treatment

Even with the same diagnosis, a stable profile can qualify for significantly better coverage.

4. Work with a broker

Underwriting is not standardized – different insurers assess risk in different ways, which can lead to very different outcomes for the same applicant.

This is why experienced brokers pre-screen your case and match you with the most suitable insurer, helping to avoid unnecessary declines.

5. Get help with the application

Small details matter.

  • Misunderstood questions
  • Incomplete answers
  • Inconsistent information

…can all lead to higher premiums or even declines.

Accurate, well-presented applications improve your chances and help avoid issues later during claim review.

6. Combine policies to increase coverage

If one policy doesn’t provide enough coverage, consider layering multiple policies. In most cases, this means starting with the best coverage you can qualify for – traditional or simplified – and using guaranteed issue only as a fallback when other options are unavailable. Because each policy type has its own limits and approval criteria, combining policies can sometimes help increase total coverage.

7. Improve your risk profile

It is all too easy to say, “just get healthy”, but the truth is, some factors are outside your control, while others aren’t.

Even modest improvements can help:

  • Quitting smoking
  • Managing weight
  • Following treatment plans

Insurers don’t expect ideal health; they value lower risk with better pricing and eligibility, so this works in many cases. In reality, there are quite a lot of seemingly minor factors besides the condition itself that impact insurance decisions.

8. Be strategic about application sequencing

Not all applications should be submitted at once.

A better approach would look like this:

  1. Pre-assess with a broker
  2. Apply to the most suitable insurer first
  3. Avoid unnecessary declines

A declined application doesn’t end your options, but it can complicate future ones.

9. Consider household (spousal) structuring

If you’re part of a couple, think beyond individual coverage. Many people place more coverage on the healthier spouse or use joint policies to structure protection at the household level.

For example, instead of two separate policies, you can insure both partners under one contract. A joint first-to-die policy pays out when the first person passes, while a joint last-to-die policy pays after both have passed (typically used for estate planning). These are sometimes used when one partner is harder to insure or to simplify coverage structure.

How your strategy affects the quotes you receive

The way you apply can significantly affect both the coverage you qualify for and the price you pay. Below are example scenarios showing how outcomes can vary based on health profile, timing, and insurer selection.

Costs for a 65-year-old non-smoking applicant for a $10,000 policy
Coverage Male Female
Traditional (Term) Life Insurance From $35/month From $28/month
Simplified Life insurance From $42/month From $34/month
Guaranteed Life insurance From $63/month From $50/month

Key insight:
Even small changes – like  time since diagnosis or insurer selection – can significantly affect outcomes.

Small tips that can make a big difference

Even small details in the application process can affect approval outcomes, pricing, or future eligibility.

  • Don’t cancel existing coverage until new coverage is approved: this avoids any gap in protection
  • Be consistent across all applications: this is how you prevent underwriting confusion or delays
  • Always disclose fully: non-disclosure can cause claim issues, so being honest ensures policy validity and protects payouts
  • Ask about reapplying after your condition improves: this allows access to better rates or policy types later on

Final thoughts

If you have a pre-existing condition, it’s true that your options may be more limited. But limited doesn’t mean fixed.

Life insurance is not just about your health – it’s about timing, structure, and strategy. With the right approach, many applicants can qualify for better coverage than they initially expect.

And in most cases, the difference between a basic policy and a strong one comes down to how well the process is handled from the start.

To explore your options, you can request a quote based on your situation at any moment.

 

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