June 8, 2026
- Non-residents are coming to B.C., receiving health care and not paying their bills, stiffing the health care system with $200M in expenses over past five years
CALGARY, AB: Think tank SecondStreet.org released data from B.C. health regions today showing people from outside Canada are coming to B.C., receiving health services, and then not paying their bills. This problem has cost the health system (taxpayers) $200.6 million since 2020/21.
“The government should definitely be taking a look at this problem,” said SecondStreet.org President Colin Craig. “This is costing B.C. taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars while access to health care for residents continues to deteriorate. B.C.’s situation is the worst we’ve seen in Canada so far.”
For perspective, the total losses could have paid for over 21,000 hip replacement operations in B.C. according to data from the Canadian Institute for Health Information.
Losses – Health Care for Non-Residents (2020/21 to 2024/25)
| Region | Losses |
| Fraser Health | $94,595,000 |
| Interior Health | $54,129,000 |
| Island Health | $20,900,000 |
| Vancouver Coastal | $30,982,000 |
| Northern Health | – N/A – |
| TOTAL | $200,606,000 |
* No response provided from Northern Health
Possible policy solutions include:
- Provincial health regions could require visitors from abroad to pay up front before receiving medical treatment (except for lifesaving cases).
- The provincial government could ask Ottawa to require visitors to have travel health insurance before entering Canada. For example, countries in Europe often require travellers from other countries to have health insurance with a minimum €30,000 of coverage as a prerequisite for obtaining a travel visa (with exemptions for certain nationalities, including Canadian citizens).
- The federal government could ban re-entry to Canada for non-residents with outstanding bills for medical care.
To view the FOI responses from each health region see below:
Fraser Health – click here
Interior Health – click here
Vancouver Coastal – click here
Island Health – click here