July 14, 2026
- Non-residents are coming to Manitoba, receiving health care, then stiffing the taxpayer with their unpaid bills, to the tune of nearly $40M over the past 5 years
CALGARY, AB: Think tank SecondStreet.org released data from Shared Health Manitoba today showing people from outside Canada are coming to the province, receiving health services and going home without paying their bills. This problem cost the health system (taxpayers) $39.62 million between 2020/21 and 2024/25.
“This issue is costing taxpayers millions of dollars while access to health care for Manitobans continues to deteriorate,” said SecondStreet.org President Colin Craig. “If the government addressed this problem, it could have millions of dollars to actually help Manitobans. For perspective, $40 million could provide almost 3,400 patients with a unilateral hip replacement operation.”
A breakdown of the $39.62 million includes:
2020/21: $3.8 million
2021/22: $8.2 million
2022/23: $4.5 million
2023/24: $18.7 million
2024/25: $4.5 million
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 response from Shared Health Manitoba – click here
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