You've paid into your benefits for years, but when you need them most, the insurer treats you like a line item.
That's the reality too many Ontario workers face. You file a long-term disability claim expecting the coverage you've been promised. Instead, you receive a terse denial letter citing a definition you've never seen, a clause buried in fine print, or a medical standard no one ever explained to you. Suddenly, you're not only injured or seriously ill, you're also fighting your own insurance company.
The fear and confusion that follows a denied long-term disability (LTD) claim are completely understandable. You might wonder whether your policy actually covers you, whether you missed a deadline, whether you should appeal—or whether it's even worth trying. That uncertainty is one of the most difficult parts of the process, and it's exactly where a long-term disability lawyer can make a big difference.
This article explains what an LTD lawyer does, how the claims process works under Ontario law, what to do immediately after a denial, and how to find the right legal help for your situation.
Key Takeaways:
A long-term disability lawyer is a legal professional who specializes in representing individuals whose LTD insurance claims have been denied, delayed, or terminated, usually by a group or individual insurer who has decided, rightly or wrongly, that you no longer meet the policy's definition of disability.
This is a distinct area of practice. An LTD lawyer is not a general personal injury lawyer, nor are they an employment lawyer, even though disability benefits are often offered through a workplace group plan. LTD claims involve the interpretation of insurance contracts, Ontario limitations law, and a body of case law specific to disability insurance disputes. Hiring someone without that focused background can give you a meaningful disadvantage in the success of your case.
The contingency fee model is one of the most important access-to-justice features of LTD representation. Under this arrangement, you pay nothing upfront. Legal fees are only collected if and when your case resolves in your favour, either through a negotiated settlement or a court judgment. For someone already off work and managing reduced income, this removes the financial barrier that would otherwise prevent many people from ever challenging a denial.
The scope of an LTD lawyer's work is broader than most people expect. Here's what competent representation typically involves:
When it comes to claiming disabiltity-related benefits due to illness or injury preventing you from working, there are actually three avenues you need to know: Employment Insurance (EI), Short-Term Disability (STD), and Long-term Disability (LTD).
When you are unable to work, income replacement usually proceeds in this order:
|
Benefit Type |
Typical Waiting Period (Elimination Period) |
Typical Benefit Duration |
|
Short-Term Disability (STD) |
1 to 14 days |
15 to 26 weeks (up to 52 weeks in some policies) |
|
Employment Insurance (EI) Sickness |
1 week (7 days) |
Up to 26 weeks |
|
Long-Term Disability (LTD) |
119 days or 17 to 26 weeks |
Up to 2 years, or until age 65 |
The transition point from STD to LTD is one of the most legally vulnerable moments in the process. Insurers sometimes use that transition to impose a stricter definition of disability, request new medical assessments, or simply deny the LTD claim on grounds they didn't raise during the STD period. This is a common moment where obtaining legal advice can protect your rights going forward.
Long-term disability insurance is designed to replace a portion of your income (typically 60 to 70 percent) when a medical condition prevents you from working. In Ontario, these benefits exist either through group plans provided by employers (the most common source) or through individual policies purchased privately.
Group plans are governed by the terms of the insurance contract between your employer and the insurer. Individual policies are governed by the specific terms you agreed to at the time of purchase. In both cases, the policy language itself defines your rights, the insurer's obligations, and the conditions under which benefits can be denied or terminated.
One important regulatory note: the Financial Services Regulatory Authority of Ontario (FSRA) oversees insurance companies operating in the province. However, FSRA handles regulatory compliance, not individual claim disputes. If your claim has been denied, FSRA is not the route to resolution. Legal action through the courts, with the aid of a long-term disability lawyer, is.
Ontario law plays a significant role in how LTD claims proceed. The most critical legal deadline is found in Ontario's Limitations Act, 2002, which imposes a two-year window to commence a legal action after the date a claim is denied or a person ought reasonably to have known they had a claim. Missing this window can permanently extinguish your right to sue, regardless of the merits of your case.
Ontario courts have a well-developed body of case law on LTD disputes. Courts have consistently held that insurance policies are to be interpreted strictly against the insurer in cases of ambiguity, a principle known as contra proferentem. This means that unclear or vague policy language tends to be resolved in favour of the insured. An experienced Ontario long-term disability lawyer understands how this jurisprudence (theory of law) applies to your specific facts.
A long-term disability claims lawyer in Ontario will understand provincial limitations law and local court procedures, and have familiarity with Ontario-based insurers and their practices all matter in building and presenting your case effectively.
|
Denial Reason |
What the Insurer Claims |
How a Lawyer Can Challenge It |
|
Failure to meet definition of disability |
You can perform some form of employment, so benefits don't apply. |
The lawyer examines whether the "own occupation" or "any occupation" standard applies and challenges the insurer's interpretation of your residual capacity. |
|
Insufficient medical evidence |
Your medical records don't support a finding of total disability. |
The lawyer commissions specialist reports, functional capacity evaluations, and detailed physician letters that directly address the policy's definition. |
|
Pre-existing condition exclusion |
Your condition existed before the policy's effective date, so it's excluded. |
The lawyer reviews medical history to determine whether the exclusion is properly invoked and whether the condition materially changed or worsened after coverage began. |
|
Non-compliance with treatment |
You haven't followed recommended medical treatment, voiding your eligibility. |
The lawyer investigates whether the treatment was truly recommended, accessible, and medically appropriate given your diagnosis. |
|
Policy lapse or missed premiums |
Coverage lapsed due to non-payment before the claim was filed. |
The lawyer examines whether proper notice was given, whether employer error contributed to the lapse, and whether coverage should have continued under a waiver of premium clause. |
Most LTD policies include an internal appeal process, which is used to request that the insurer reconsider its decision. This process is sometimes useful, but it has real limitations. The insurer is reviewing its own decision, using its own standards, and there is no independent third-party involved.
In many cases, experienced LTD lawyers recommend skipping the internal appeal and proceeding directly to litigation.This is particularly true when:
An internal appeal does not pause Ontario's two-year limitation clock. Timeline expectations matter here. An internal appeal can take months, during which your limitation period continues to run. A court action, while lengthier overall, gives you the full benefit of the legal process, including discovery, negotiation, and if necessary, a trial, and places your claim before an independent decision-maker.
The strength of an LTD case ultimately rests on medical evidence. But not all medical documentation carries equal weight with insurers and courts.
Specialist opinions are generally more persuasive than general practitioner notes alone. If your disabling condition involves chronic pain, psychiatric illness, neurological injury, or complex internal medicine, a specialist report that speaks directly to your functional limitations, and connects them explicitly to your inability to work, is critical.
Functional capacity evaluations (FCEs) provide an objective, standardized assessment of what physical or cognitive tasks a person can and cannot perform. These are often ordered by insurers using their own assessors, whose conclusions may not accurately reflect your true limitations. Your lawyer can commission an independent FCE to counter a one-sided insurer-ordered independent medical examination (IME).
Insurers frequently arrange IMEs to support denials or terminations. A skilled long-term disability claims lawyer knows how to scrutinize these reports, identify methodological weaknesses, and present opposing expert evidence that gives the court or mediator a complete picture.
Not every lawyer is equipped to handle an LTD claim effectively. The right fit means finding someone who understands the insurance landscape in Ontario, knows the insurers involved, and has a demonstrated track record in disability law specifically.
When evaluating a potential lawyer, consider asking these questions during your initial consultation:
There are also red flags to watch for: firms that handle disability as a small part of a broader general practice, have vague or unexplained fee structures, and lawyers who can't speak concretely about their experience with Ontario insurers are all reasons to look elsewhere.
The best long-term disability lawyers in Ontario combine specialization, results, and commitment to their clients in a way that generalist practices simply can't match. Here's what distinguishes them:
The process of engaging a long-term disability lawyer is straightforward, and it begins well before you have to decide whether to hire anyone. Here's a step-by-step approach:
Before your consultation, collect everything you have: the denial letter itself, your full insurance policy or benefits booklet, and any medical documentation you've already provided to the insurer.
Focus your search on lawyers and firms whose practice is specifically focused on disability insurance law. General practitioners rarely have the depth of experience required for these claims.
Most Ontario LTD lawyers offer a free initial consultation. This is your opportunity to have your case assessed at no cost and with no obligation. Don't mistake a consultation for a sales pitch. Its purpose is to help you make an informed decision.
Review the retainer agreement carefully. Understand the percentage the firm will receive if you win, how disbursements are handled, and what happens if the case is dismissed.
Ontario's two-year limitation period begins running from the date of denial, or from the date you first ought to have known your claim was being denied. Time is a legal constraint, not just a practical one. Delaying your consultation puts your rights at risk.
The timeline varies significantly depending on the complexity of the case, the insurer involved, and whether the matter resolves through negotiation or requires litigation. Many claims settle through negotiation or mediation within 12 to 24 months of retaining a lawyer. Cases that proceed to trial can take considerably longer. Your lawyer should be able to give you a realistic estimate based on your specific facts.
Yes. You have the right to change legal representation at any time. If you switch, your original lawyer may be entitled to a portion of any ultimate recovery to reflect the work they performed under the contingency agreement. Review your retainer agreement for the specific terms.
It may be. Ontario's two-year limitation period is strict and begins running from the date of denial, or from the date you ought reasonably to have known your rights were engaged. If more than two years have passed since your denial, your right to sue may be extinguished. However, there are limited exceptions, and the only way to know for certain is to consult a lawyer immediately.
Your employer's HR department can assist with administrative tasks, but they do not represent your legal interests — and in many cases, their interests are not fully aligned with yours. HR staff are not lawyers, are not trained in insurance law, and cannot give you legal advice. If your claim has been denied or terminated, independent legal counsel is essential.
These are distinct areas of law. Workers' compensation in Ontario is administered by the Workplace Safety and Insurance Board (WSIB) and applies to workplace injuries. LTD claims arise from group or individual disability insurance policies and are governed by insurance contract law. A lawyer who handles WSIB appeals may not have the expertise required for LTD disputes, and vice versa.
Yes. Benefit reductions and partial terminations are legally challengeable in the same way as outright denials. If your insurer has reduced your benefit amount, changed the basis on which benefits are calculated, or introduced a new condition on your continued eligibility, a lawyer can review whether that change was lawful under your policy.
A long-term disability denial isn't the final word. It's the beginning of a legal process that, with the right representation, can be reversed. Ontario law provides meaningful protections for claimants, but those protections only work if you act within the limitation period and with proper legal guidance.
The most important step you can take right now is to book a free consultation before responding to your insurer or making any decisions about your claim. A qualified LTD lawyer can tell you where you stand, what your options are, and what the realistic path forward looks like, at no cost to you.
Strype Injury Lawyers serves clients throughout Ontario, including Hamilton, Kingston, Kitchener, Toronto, and surrounding communities. Jeffrey Strype is a Certified Specialist in Civil Litigation (Law Society of Ontario) with over 45 years of experience and a Supreme Court victory on record in an LTD matter (MacIvor v. Manulife) that changed the law for disability claimants across the country.
Don't talk to the insurer. Talk to us.
Contact Strype Injury Lawyers today for a free, no-obligation case evaluation.
Legal Disclaimer: The information in this article is intended for general educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Every personal injury claim is unique, and the facts of your situation may affect your legal rights and options. If you have been injured or believe you may have a legal claim, contact a qualified personal injury lawyer in Ontario as soon as possible.