Rate Comparison: Hanover vs Nearby Cities (2026)
| City | Province | Monthly | Annual | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Walkerton lowest | ON | CA$118 | CA$1,420 | CA$56 less |
| Mount Forest | ON | CA$120 | CA$1,440 | CA$36 less |
| Owen Sound highest | ON | CA$132 | CA$1,584 | CA$108 more |
| Hanover (this city) | ON | CA$123 | CA$1,476 | 23% below prov avg |
| Ontario Provincial Avg | CA$161 | CA$1,927 | Baseline | |
Hanover sits below the Ontario provincial average, ranking it among the more affordable markets in the province. The most affordable nearby option in this comparison is Walkerton at CA$1,420/year.
Risk Profile: Hanover
Low RiskOntario carriers use local traffic data, theft statistics, weather exposure, and collision frequency to calculate your Hanover rate. Knowing your city's risk profile helps identify which coverage elements are driving your premium and which comparison strategies are most effective.
Top Discount Strategies for Hanover
Multi-Vehicle Bundle
Two or more vehicles with the same carrier simultaneously
Home & Auto Bundle
Largest single available discount for homeowners and condo owners
Mature Driver Discount
Bruce-Grey County's demographic strongly skews toward qualifying mature drivers aged 55-plus
Low Annual Mileage
Hanover residents with limited local and regional driving under 10,000 km per year
Mandatory Coverage in Ontario
Ontario requires all drivers to carry four types of mandatory coverage under the Insurance Act. The FSRA oversees all admitted carriers in the province.
| Coverage | What It Covers |
|---|---|
| Third-Party Liability | Pays others for injury or property damage; minimum CA$200,000 in Ontario |
| Statutory Accident Benefits (SABs) | Pays your medical, rehabilitation, income replacement, and caregiver benefits regardless of fault |
| Direct Compensation-Property Damage (DCPD) | Covers damage to your vehicle when another insured driver is at fault |
| Uninsured Automobile Coverage | Protects you if you are hit by an uninsured or unidentified driver |
2026 Reform Update — Ontario
Ontario's most significant auto insurance reform in two decades takes effect July 1, 2026: the new Statutory Accident Benefits Schedule allows drivers to select benefit levels a-la-carte rather than purchasing the standard package. For high-premium drivers this can reduce premiums by 5–15%, but inadequate benefit selection creates coverage gaps. Work with a licensed Ontario broker to model the correct selection for your situation before the next renewal.