Nine months after the Pharmacare Act (C-64) received Royal Assent on October 10, 2024 , just four provinces and territories have signed bilateral agreements with the federal government. Those agreements are valued at $928 million over four years starting in 2026.
The Pharmacare Act is meant to provide universal access to Diabetes medication and contraceptives, making those pharmaceuticals free at the point of access for people covered by public health insurance. In order to implement that vision, the federal government needs to sign funding agreements with the provinces, who are responsible for administering health plans.
Manitoba, British Columbia, Prince Edward Island and Yukon are participating in the federal program, covering nearly 7.5 million people. The remaining nine provinces and territories without agreements are passing up valuable federal health care funding—which could be providing free medication to residents paid for by the federal government.
With so few jurisdictions enrolled in pharmacare, four out of five Canadians are not benefiting from the program. The gap is leaving a patchwork of coverage across the country.
A person in Manitoba benefits from free contraception, saving them hundreds of dollars each year, while someone in Alberta has to shoulder this cost on their own. A resident of British Columbia has their diabetes medication covered publicly, but loses that benefit if they have to move to Ontario.
The Pharmacare Act stipulates that the program must be “guided by the Canada Health Act.” The Canada Health Act includes universality and portability as two of its five central principles, which cannot be fulfilled until all provinces join the landmark pharmacare program.



Only 17.90% of Canada has access to pharmacare. It’s time roll the corrupt provincial politicians over the coals for allowing systematic murder to their constituents despite receiving taxpayer funds to expand healthcare.
The list of shame:
Ontario, Quebec, Alberta, Saskatchewan, New Brunswick, Newfoundland & Labrador, Nova Scotia, Northwest Territories and Nunavut.
Quebec already has a pharmacare program. Residents are required to either have a private plan, or participate in the provincial one (between $0 and $766/year, depending upon income). It covers a lot more than diabetes and contraceptive medication, too.
Having the whole country buy prescriptions instead of just the province gets better rates.
They’re either being barred by insurance firms protecting their revenues, or trying to figure out which oligarch to give the job of “administering” the program to. Or both. Perhaps it’s an internal, oligarch class, fight.
We need to organize to add more folks to the 14% of those covered under dental care and the 17.90% on pharmacare.
Our government serves the people not corpo lobbyists.
That’s crazy low number of people! I would have thought it was like more than 40%.