Skip to main content
Home / Resources / Critical Illness Insurance Claim Denied: Win Your Appeal
Disability Law

Critical Illness Insurance Claim Denied: Win Your Appeal

UL Lawyers Professional Corporation
April 14, 2026
15 min read

A denial letter often lands at the worst possible moment. You’re already dealing with a cancer diagnosis, a cardiac event, a stroke, or another serious condition. Then the insurer says no.

That refusal can feel personal. It usually isn’t. It’s a contract dispute wrapped in medical language, deadlines, and internal insurance procedures. In Ontario, that means the next steps matter more than your first reaction.

If your critical illness insurance claim denied letter just arrived, don’t assume the insurer got it right. Don’t assume your doctor’s diagnosis automatically matches the policy wording either. Critical illness policies are narrow by design, and many denials turn on wording not adequately disclosed to buyers when they bought coverage.

You Received a Denial Letter What Happens Now

Clients often tell me the same thing. They thought the hard part was getting through treatment or waiting for test results. Then the denial letter arrived and replaced fear with confusion.

That reaction makes sense. The letter is usually written in technical language, with references to policy definitions, exclusions, medical criteria, or alleged missing information. It rarely explains the issue in plain English.

A young person sits at a kitchen table looking distressed while reading a document labeled claim denied.

A denial is serious, but it isn’t the end

Across Canada, 17% of critical illness insurance claims submitted between 2019 and 2023 were denied, and 71% of those denials were tied to the condition not meeting the policy definition according to Munich Re, Canada (Life)’s 2024 Individual Insurance Survey. That tells you two important things.

First, you’re not alone. Second, many denials are not about whether you’re sick. They’re about whether the insurer says your diagnosis fits the exact language of the contract.

Practical rule: Treat the denial letter as the start of a file, not the end of your claim.

That shift matters. Once you stop reading the letter as a final judgment and start reading it as the insurer’s position, you can respond properly.

What to do with the shock

In the first hour, resist the urge to call the insurer and argue from memory. Don’t rely on what your adviser told you years ago. Don’t assume the policy “should” cover you because the illness sounds close enough.

Instead, do three things:

  • Read the stated reason carefully. Highlight every sentence that explains why payment was refused.
  • Pull the policy documents. You need the wording, any riders, and your certificate of coverage.
  • Preserve every document. Keep the envelope, email, denial letter, claim forms, and any medical paperwork already sent.

If you need help understanding the insurer’s position, a lawyer who handles denied insurance matters can review the letter and the policy together. This Ontario-focused lawyer for insurance claim resource explains that kind of review in practical terms.

The path forward

Most denied claim files move through the same sequence. Identify the exact reason. Gather evidence that answers that reason. File a focused appeal. Escalate if the insurer keeps its position.

That’s the work. Not outrage. Not guesswork.

Decoding the Denial Why Your Claim Was Rejected

A denial often turns on a narrow point, not a broad rejection of your illness. In practice, I usually see one of four problems. The diagnosis does not fit the policy definition. The insurer says the application left out important medical information. The file lacks a test result or specialist note the policy requires. Or the insurer is relying on an exclusion period or waiting period.

The first category causes the most confusion because it feels unfair. Your doctor may be using the right medical term, but the policy may define that illness more narrowly than ordinary clinical practice does.

Here is how that gap often appears.

ConditionWhat your doctor may sayWhat the insurer may focus on
Heart attackYou had a myocardial infarctionWhether the policy’s required enzyme or diagnostic criteria were met
StrokeYou suffered a strokeWhether the file shows the required neurological deficit and confirming imaging
CancerYou were diagnosed with cancerWhether the policy excludes early-stage, non-invasive, or low-grade forms

Read the denial letter with one question in mind. What exact requirement does the insurer say is missing?

Certain phrases usually point to the underlying issue:

  • Definition not met
    The insurer is saying the medical event is acknowledged, but the contract wording was not satisfied.

  • Condition not covered
    The policy may cover one form of an illness and exclude another.

  • Material misrepresentation
    The insurer is alleging the application was inaccurate or incomplete in a way that matters to coverage.

  • Pre-existing condition or prior symptoms
    The insurer may be saying earlier complaints, tests, or consultations should have been disclosed or trigger an exclusion.

  • Insufficient proof
    The insurer is saying the records submitted do not prove a required element yet.

That last point matters. Insufficient proof is often fixable. A true exclusion is harder. A definitional dispute sits in the middle. It can often be challenged, but only if the medical evidence answers the policy wording directly.

If you need to compare the denial against the coverage you bought, this plain-language guide on what is critical illness insurance coverage is a useful starting point.

Insurers also make these decisions through structured workflows. Standard forms, checklists, and internal medical reviews can push a file toward denial if a key phrase or record is missing. A short explanation of automated claims processing systems shows why a technically incomplete submission can be screened out even when the underlying condition is serious.

There is another issue claimants often miss. The denial reason on paper is not always the whole problem. In Ontario, I watch for conduct that suggests bad faith. Repeated requests for records the insurer already has. Unexplained delay. Cherry-picking one note while ignoring the rest of the chart. Refusing to answer reasonable questions about the decision. If that is happening, document it carefully. Save every email, keep notes of every call, and record dates for each request and response. A weak denial can sometimes be corrected on appeal. A pattern of unfair handling may become just as important as the medical dispute itself.

Your Immediate Action Plan The First 48 Hours

The first two days matter because this is when people make avoidable mistakes. They call the adjuster casually, send partial records, or accept wording they don’t fully understand.

A person highlighting paperwork with a yellow marker while holding a smartphone on a wooden desk.

Start with document control

Create one folder, digital and paper if possible. Put everything in it.

Include:

  • The denial letter
  • Your full policy package
  • All claim forms submitted
  • Medical records already provided
  • Emails and notes of phone calls

Then make a timeline. List the date of diagnosis, the date of claim submission, any requests from the insurer, and the date of denial.

Ask for the complete claim file

Write to the insurer and request a complete copy of the file used to assess your claim. Ask for internal medical reviews, claim notes, correspondence, and any documents they say they relied on.

Keep the request short and in writing. Email is fine if that is how you’ve been communicating.

Ask for the insurer’s reasons and records in a way that leaves a paper trail. Verbal conversations disappear. Written requests don’t.

Do not do these things

Some steps feel productive but can hurt you.

  • Don’t accept a partial payment without advice. In some cases, partial resolution language can create settlement problems.
  • Don’t rewrite your medical history casually on the phone. Off-the-cuff answers can create inconsistencies.
  • Don’t send duplicate records blindly. Send targeted evidence tied to the denial reason.
  • Don’t miss dates in the letter. Diary every deadline immediately.

Make a deadline list

Use your phone calendar and a paper backup. Add reminders.

Your list should include:

  1. Any internal appeal deadline
  2. Any date for sending added medical information
  3. Any limitation date mentioned by the insurer
  4. Follow-up dates with your doctor or specialist

If the denial letter is unclear about timing, ask the insurer to confirm deadlines in writing.

Book medical follow-up quickly

If the insurer says test results, imaging, pathology, or specialist opinions are missing, request those records right away. Some clinics and hospitals take time to release records. Delay on your side can become a strategic advantage for the insurer.

The first 48 hours aren’t about winning the case. They’re about protecting it.

Building Your Appeal The Evidence You Need

A strong appeal package does one thing well. It answers the insurer’s reason for denial with organised proof.

If the denial says your diagnosis doesn’t meet the policy definition, every piece of evidence should move toward that issue. If the denial raises application or disclosure concerns, your evidence package should answer those concerns directly.

A checklist of documents needed to build a formal appeal for a denied health insurance claim.

Medical evidence has to be specific

Many appeals fail because the medical support is too general. A short note saying “my patient had a heart attack” may not be enough if the policy requires certain test findings. The same issue arises with stroke claims and cancer claims.

Ask your treating physicians for reports that deal with the insurer’s actual position. Give them the relevant policy wording and denial excerpt so they know what they are responding to.

Useful medical evidence often includes:

  • Hospital records with admission notes, discharge summaries, and consultations
  • Diagnostic testing such as pathology, bloodwork, imaging, ECG results, or specialist interpretation
  • A narrative report from your physician that connects the diagnosis to the policy wording
  • Clarification letters where the insurer has taken too narrow or inaccurate a view of the medical file

Administrative evidence matters more than people think

Appeals are not won on medicine alone. They’re also won on organisation.

Build a package that includes:

Document typeWhy it matters
Policy and certificateShows the exact wording and any riders
Denial letterDefines the issue you must answer
Communication logTracks requests, delays, and inconsistencies
Claim file materialsReveals what the insurer relied on
Application documentsImportant if disclosure is being challenged

A communication log is especially useful. Record the date, name, role, and summary of every contact with the insurer.

Personal evidence can strengthen the record

Critical illness policies are definition-driven, but context still helps. If your records are fragmented, personal evidence can help your lawyer or physician build a coherent chronology.

That may include:

  • A symptom timeline from the onset of symptoms to diagnosis
  • A treatment journal showing admissions, medications, procedures, and recovery issues
  • Family notes confirming what happened when you were unable to track events yourself
  • Employment or leave records showing when illness disrupted normal life

A messy file helps the insurer. A dated, indexed file helps you.

Build the package like a case, not a pile

The most persuasive appeals are indexed. They have tabs or digital labels. They cross-reference the denial reason and answer it point by point.

A simple structure works well:

  1. Cover letter that identifies the denial reason
  2. Policy wording with the relevant definition highlighted
  3. Medical evidence in date order
  4. Doctor’s explanatory letter
  5. Timeline and communication log
  6. Any additional supporting records

If the matter begins to overlap with other denied benefit issues, such as disability coverage, this resource on long-term disability denied can help you spot related claim problems that sometimes arise alongside critical illness disputes.

Independent opinions can be important

Where the insurer relies heavily on an internal medical review, an independent opinion can help correct the record. The point is not to collect opinions randomly. The point is to get one that addresses the exact disputed definition.

The better question for any expert is not “Do you support my claim?” It is “Can you address this wording and explain whether the clinical evidence satisfies it?”

That’s how appeals become persuasive.

Once your material is ready, you need to decide where to send it and how hard to push.

Not every case should follow the same path. Some denials can be reversed with a clean internal appeal. Others are better handled through a formal complaint route or early legal action.

Internal appeal versus external escalation

Here’s the practical comparison.

RouteWhat it involvesStrengthsLimits
Internal insurer appealWritten appeal to the insurer with supporting evidenceCan resolve the matter without litigation. Good where the denial is based on incomplete records or a narrow review.The insurer is reviewing its own decision.
External complaint processComplaint to the insurer’s ombuds office, then external review options such as OLHI where appropriateUseful for getting another level of review and forcing a structured responseExternal bodies have limits and may not award the same remedies a court can
LawsuitFormal legal claim in Ontario courtStrongest option where definitions are disputed sharply, facts are contested, or bad faith is in issueMore demanding process, though many cases resolve before trial

Internal appeals work best when the problem is precise

If the denial is based on one missing medical criterion or one misunderstood record, an internal appeal can be worthwhile. Keep it focused.

A good appeal letter should:

  • State the decision being appealed
  • Quote the relevant policy wording
  • Identify where the insurer got the facts or interpretation wrong
  • Attach records in a clean index
  • Request a written response by a defined date

Don’t turn the appeal into a life story. Use only the facts that answer the denial.

External complaint routes can help, but know their limits

If the insurer maintains the denial, a complaint route may still be useful. In some files, it creates pressure for a more careful review. In others, it confirms that the dispute is about contract interpretation and needs legal action.

What people often misunderstand is this: a complaint body is not the same thing as a court. It may help move communication forward, but it is not a substitute for a lawsuit where the insurer has dug in.

A lawsuit is often the more realistic path where:

  • The insurer is relying on a rigid reading of a medical definition
  • There are serious disclosure allegations
  • The insurer has ignored or minimised specialist evidence
  • Delay is creating financial pressure
  • Bad faith concerns are emerging

At that stage, a lawyer can assess not just the appeal itself but the litigation position. One option for Ontario claimants is to speak with a critical illness insurance lawyer in Brampton, particularly if you need help drafting the appeal record or deciding whether to sue.

The strategic question isn’t “Can I keep appealing forever?” It’s “Which route puts real pressure on this denial?”

When to Consult a Lawyer Recognizing Bad Faith

Some denials are wrong but ordinary. Others suggest something more troubling.

Under Ontario law, insurers owe a duty of good faith and fair dealing, and persistent denial tactics, unreasonable delays, or deliberate misinterpretation of policy language may amount to actionable bad faith, as discussed in this Ontario-focused article on critical illness insurance claim denials and insurer conduct.

A professional woman advising a man in a green blazer as he signs an important legal document.

Red flags that should change your approach

Watch for patterns like these:

  • Repeated requests for the same records after you’ve already provided them
  • Long stretches of silence followed by new demands with tight deadlines
  • A shifting denial reason where the insurer keeps changing its position
  • Selective reading of medical evidence while ignoring specialist support
  • Pressure to accept a reduced outcome quickly

When the insurer stops acting like a reviewer and starts acting like an obstacle, get legal advice.

A lawyer can also help you document the conduct properly. That includes preserving emails, creating a chronology, and identifying where the insurer’s actions may support a broader claim beyond the denied benefit itself. For firms that want intake handled carefully from the first contact, resources such as Hire intake specialist show how structured documentation improves file quality early.

If your claim has reached that point, legal help is no longer just about sending a better letter. It’s about protecting your rights fully. Ontario claimants can review one legal option through UL Lawyers’ critical illness claim service page.


If your critical illness insurance claim was denied in Ontario, you don’t have to guess your way through the appeal process. UL Lawyers assists with policy review, appeal preparation, and litigation where an insurer refuses to pay. You can contact UL Lawyers for a no-obligation consultation about the denial letter, the policy wording, and the next step that makes sense for your case.

NEED A LAWYER?

We are here 24/7 to address your case. You can speak with a lawyer to request a consultation.

905-744-8888

GET STARTED WITH A FREE CONSULTATION

All fields are required unless noted. Your information stays confidential.

Why Choose UL Lawyers

  • Decades of combined experience
  • Millions recovered for our clients
  • No fee unless we win your case
  • 24/7 client support
  • Personalized legal strategies