Aviva Canada : Everything you need to know

Policyholders can save on auto insurance premiums through discounts that reward them for:

2021 customer satisfaction rating
BBB: B- rating
InsurEye: 1.3 stars out of 5 stars

Home insurance

Coverage type

What is pays for

Option of $1 million or $2 million personal liability coverage

Optional coverages

Service line coverage

Costs to repair or replace failed underground service lines on the property

Reduces deductible every consecutive year the policyholder is claims-free

ID theft coverage

Restoring personal information and financial losses

Protects home insurance from being affected after the first claim

Claim prevent coverage

Cost of installing a loss prevention device like an alarm, after a covered claim to prevent it from happening again

Home protect bundle

Minor repairs in the home before they lead to a larger claim with this bundle of pre-paid services

Aviva Canada home insurance exclusions to watch out for:

Travel insurance by RBC Insurance

Coverage type

What it pays for

The “Most Coverage”

Travel medical coverage

Expenses incurred in case the insured gets sick or an unexpected event forces them to cancel a trip, come home early, or delay their return home

About

Aviva Canada is a property and casualty insurance group, providing home, automobile, lifestyle, and business insurance to 2.4 million customers. A subsidiary of UK-based Aviva plc, Aviva Canada has more than 4,000 employees focused on creating a bright and sustainable future for our people, our customers, our communities and our planet. In 2021, we announced our plan to become a net zero carbon emissions company by 2040, the most demanding target of any major insurance company in the world.

The company has a long-standing history in Canada and traces its roots back to the early 1800s when the first Canadian-based Aviva heritage company (Canada Accident Assurance Company) was incorporated, after which the General Accident Assurance Company of Canada was incorporated in 1906. Close to a century later, several Aviva predecessors merged and, in 2003, CGU Insurance Company of Canada changed its name to Aviva Insurance Company of Canada, marking a new chapter in its history.

Aviva Canada’s 4,000-plus employees work with independent brokers as well as small and medium-sized businesses.

Under the Aviva Canada umbrella

Aviva has several insurance companies in Canada through which it does business. The Aviva Insurance Company of Canada has a wide range of personal and business insurance products and services that it provides to policyholders, doing so via a network of independent insurance brokers.

Elite Insurance Company, meanwhile, is the country’s largest insurer of leisure and lifestyle products and services, offering coverage for a variety of specialty insurance products that include recreational vehicles, mobile homes, horses and hobby farms, sailboats, and other personal watercrafts as well as antique, classic, and custom cars.

Rounding out the list is the Traders General Insurance Company, a leading group insurer in Canada that offers home and auto insurance to large and mid-sized groups coast to coast; Pilot Insurance Company that services Ontario exclusively; traditional home and auto coverage provider Scottish & York Insurance Co. Limited; and S&Y Insurance Company, which provides auto insurance in Newfoundland and Labrador.

Aviva Canada also has minority ownership in two broker businesses and owns 100% of a handful of intermediaries in Ontario, Québec, Alberta, British Columbia, and New Brunswick.

Action on climate change

Climate change is a priority issue for Aviva. By the end of 2021 Aviva had invested £7.6 billion in green assets. This includes £4.4 billion in low carbon infrastructure, such as wind farms and solar panels, £1.6 billion climate transition funds and £1.6 billion in green, social and sustainable bonds as well as green and sustainability-linked loans.

In the United Kingdom and in Canada, Aviva has also partnered with the World Wildlife Fund to tackle biodiversity loss, which goes hand in hand with climate change, to restore nature and create more climate-resilient communities.

A focus on community

As part of its commitment to build stronger and more resilient communities, Aviva Canada supports various charitable organizations working to advance DE&I initiatives across Canada. Last year, the company donated, $235,000 across nine charitable organizations to help fund the important work they do. This includes supporting women and their careers, creating opportunities and facilitating economic development in Indigenous communities and promoting mental health.

In September 2022, Aviva Canada also donated $100,000 to the Canadian Red Cross to support disaster relief efforts across the eastern provinces impacted by Hurricane Fiona.

As part of its corporate philanthropy, Aviva Canada supported several charities and social causes through the Aviva Community Fund. This fund awarded $8.5 million to more than 280 charities and community groups in the country since its inception in 2009, though it has since been shut down as they focus on other initiatives.

The company also holds a partnership with the Canadian Red Cross and became the first carbon-neutral insurer globally in 2006. Through My Community Fund, Aviva Canada supports its employees’ participation in volunteerism activities in their local communities by matching their personal donations and giving their staff time off to volunteer.

The community mindset extends to Canadians affected by natural catastrophes. Aviva’s national catastrophe claims team is prepared to spring into action and support local claims staff as well as customers in need when disasters strike. Aviva Canada is also keeping an eye out for future catastrophes. In 2018, the company embedded earthquake coverage in all British Columbia homeowner and tenant insurance policies, which comes at no extra cost to new and current customers renewing with Aviva and made it at the time only one of three insurers to offer earthquake insurance coverage without restrictions in all risk zones.

“While all insurers in BC offer earthquake coverage as an endorsement, until today, no company has offered it within a standard policy,” said Aviva Canada chief underwriting officer Phil Gibson. “This is concerning since our survey shows that 60% of BC homeowners believe their policy would provide financial support in event of an earthquake. No one should be left in the lurch without coverage that they thought they had.”

In September 2022, Aviva Canada also donated $100,000 to the Canadian Red Cross to support disaster relief efforts across the eastern provinces impacted by Hurricane Fiona.

Insurtech on the mind

Aviva Canada doesn’t shy away from recognizing the impacts of technology on the insurance industry. The company has a corporate fund, Aviva Ventures, through which it is building a portfolio of start-ups. It aims to invest $170 million in start-ups around the world by 2020 and takes minority equity stakes of up to 20%, usually at the Seed Plus or Series A stage. One of its investments includes Cocoon, a smart home security system that uses technology to detect low-frequency sounds caused by movement and learns the standard sound patterns around a home, sending an alert to the resident’s smartphone if it notices unusual activity.

Hackathons are another avenue of innovation that the company is investing in. Participants have a set time – typically, one to three days – to work in teams, and produce new products and propositions, which Aviva Canada will then explore taking to market. According to Ben Isotta-Riches, chief information officer at the company, hackathons help create a real entrepreneurial spirit inside the business. At the same time, the CIO sees Aviva’s Digital Garage, a space at the heart of Toronto’s financial district where the company develops leading-edge digital solutions and hosts events centred around technology and innovation, as becoming the cultural and physical hub of Canada’s insurtech community.

“This space is the iconic starting point of our journey; a place where we can galvanize our own organization and bring others together,” he told Insurance Business. “We will continue to make investments in different companies that have disruptive potential. We are also working with the DMZ at Ryerson to create an insurtech accelerator program to try and help foster the development of ideas here in Toronto.”

Through its partnership with a US-based provider of virtual claims technology, Snapsheet, Aviva Canada is also creating an app-based virtual claims system, which will allow customers to settle claims 20% to 40% faster than with traditional channels. A broker-branded app for Google Assistant was released in February 2018 in collaboration with insurance automation solutions developer ProNavigator meanwhile allows customers to connect to a broker using Google’s hands-free smart speakers, demonstrating Aviva Canada’s commitment to integrating technology into its products and services.