The 8.6% national figure is an average. Almost no homeowner experiences the average. They experience their province, their postal code, their roof age, and their insurer's view of their specific risk. Provincial averages get a homeowner closer to the right baseline expectation than the national figure does.
A few patterns are worth naming explicitly. Alberta's persistent lead — 16.2% YoY and 5.4% in the most recent quarter alone — reflects a multi-year accumulation of catastrophe losses that insurers are still pricing through. For homeowners renewing in Alberta, an 8% renewal increase would be running well below the provincial average. A 20% increase would be in line with what the index implies for the most exposed risks. Saskatchewan and Manitoba, at 11.2% YoY, are in a similar bucket — sustained pressure, with claims experience still working its way through pricing.
The Atlantic provinces' 10.8% YoY pace is notable for a different reason. Atlantic Canada has historically been a lower-premium region, but the same Insurance Business coverage references significant recent wildfire and secondary-peril activity in the area, which is now showing up in pricing.
Ontario's 6.2% YoY and 2.8% QoQ figures put it in the middle. The province is large and heterogeneous — urban, suburban, and rural risks with very different loss profiles roll up into the same provincial number. An Ontario homeowner whose neighbourhood has had a recent flood event or whose building has known water-damage history will see a larger increase than the provincial average suggests.
Quebec and BC are the moderating cases. BC's 1.6% YoY and Quebec's 4.0% YoY are the lowest in the country, with both provinces showing quarterly property declines. That does not mean prices will fall — quoting-side declines are an early signal, not a settled trend — but it does say the trajectory has shifted relative to the rest of the country.
The longer-term context is in Homeowner.ca's coverage of the five-year Canadian home insurance trend, which shows premiums up 31% over the period as record disaster losses reshape pricing. The Q1 2026 index is the most recent quarter of that trend, not a separate event.
The Applied Rating Index measures the price quoted on the platforms Applied Systems operates, weighted by quote volume. It is a strong proxy for the rate environment a homeowner shopping or renewing today will encounter, but it is not the same as in-force average premium across all policies. Treat the percentages as expectation-setting, not as a forecast of a specific renewal.