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Future Care Costs in Alberta Catastrophic-Injury Claims: Attendant Care, Medical, and Home Modifications

Last updated: 2026-05-16 · Reviewed by: HurtCallMax Editorial Team · Reading time: 11 min · General information about Alberta personal-injury damages. Not legal advice for your specific case. Call 780-900-6022 for a free case review.

Bottom line: In Alberta catastrophic-injury cases — quadriplegia, severe traumatic brain injury, multiple amputations, and similar permanent total impairment — the future-care cost head of damage routinely exceeds the pain-and-suffering award by 5x to 10x. While pain-and-suffering is capped by the Supreme Court of Canada Trilogy at roughly $430,000 in 2026 dollars, future-care has no cap. Lifetime attendant-care projections alone can exceed $3 million in present-value terms. Building this head of damage properly requires an actuarial valuation, expert physician reports on prognosis, an occupational therapist's detailed care plan, and a vocational consultant's report on lost earning capacity. Most of the heavy lifting in a serious-injury Alberta file is on the future-care calculation, not the pain-and-suffering negotiation.

1. What “future care” actually means

Future-care costs compensate the claimant for the medical, rehabilitative, and supportive services they will need going forward as a result of the injury. The head of damage was recognized in Andrews v Grand & Toy Alberta Ltd, [1978] 2 SCR 229 — the same Alberta case that set the pain-and-suffering ceiling — and the Court explicitly distinguished it from the capped non-pecuniary award.

Future-care covers, broadly:

  • Attendant care — personal-care workers, nursing care, family-member compensation for caregiving.
  • Ongoing medical and therapy costs — physician visits, prescription medications, physiotherapy, chiropractic, psychological counselling, pain management.
  • Home modifications — wheelchair ramps, widened doorways, accessible bathrooms, stair lifts, automated systems.
  • Assistive technology — power wheelchair, communication devices, environmental controls, computer assistive technology.
  • Vehicle modifications — accessible van conversion, hand controls, lifts.
  • Recreational and quality-of-life support — adaptive sports equipment, accessible vacation accommodations.
  • Replacement of housekeeping and home-maintenance services the claimant performed pre-accident but can no longer do.
  • Case management — ongoing professional coordination of medical and support services.

The test is the same as for any pecuniary loss: what services would the claimant reasonably need to address the consequences of the injury over their remaining lifetime?

2. Why this number is so large

Future-care looks small in any individual year but compounds dramatically over the claimant's remaining lifetime. Worked example for a hypothetical 35-year-old quadriplegic Alberta claimant with 45-year remaining life expectancy:

  • Attendant care — 24-hour-a-day support care via a combination of professional workers and family. At $25/hour blended rate × 24 hours × 365 days × 45 years = $9.85 million in undiscounted future dollars.
  • Ongoing medical/therapy — physiatry, physiotherapy, pain management, equipment replacement, urological care. Maybe $30,000-$50,000 per year × 45 years = $1.35 million to $2.25 million undiscounted.
  • Home modifications — one-time $250,000 initial + maintenance / replacement at $20,000/year × 45 years = $1.15 million undiscounted.
  • Assistive technology, vehicle modifications, case management — another $500,000 to $1 million undiscounted across the lifetime.

Undiscounted total: roughly $13-14 million over the claimant's remaining lifetime. The present-value calculation (applying a real discount rate of around 1-2% net of inflation, per Court of King's Bench practice) reduces that to a settlement-day figure typically in the $4-6 million range for a young quadriplegic. The Alberta Civil Practice Note generally accepted real discount rate is published periodically and is what actuaries apply.

Now compare to the non-pecuniary cap: roughly $430,000 in 2026 dollars. Future-care is 10-15x the size of pain-and-suffering in catastrophic cases. This is why catastrophic-injury settlements run into the millions even though the pain-and-suffering ceiling looks low.

3. The expert evidence required

Future-care claims do not settle without expert evidence. The standard package for a serious-injury Alberta file includes:

  • Treating physician(s) on prognosis — what the claimant will need medically over the remaining lifetime. Physiatrist for spinal cord injury, neurologist for TBI, orthopaedic surgeon for serious orthopaedic injury.
  • Occupational therapist's functional capacity evaluation and care plan — what activities of daily living the claimant can and cannot do, and what supports are required.
  • Independent attendant-care expert — how many hours per day of each type of care are needed (skilled nursing, personal support work, family caregiver respite), at what hourly rate.
  • Vocational consultant — pre-accident earning capacity, post-accident residual earning capacity, present value of the wage-loss differential.
  • Economist/actuary — present-value calculation across all future-care heads, applying the appropriate discount rate, life-expectancy table, and inflation assumptions.
  • Future-care cost estimator — a specialist who builds an itemized lifetime care cost report.

Each expert produces a report; each report is subject to challenge by defence experts. The contested expert-evidence stage of a catastrophic Alberta personal-injury file routinely lasts 18-36 months and consumes hundreds of thousands of dollars in expert fees. Reputable Alberta personal-injury firms front these disbursements out of pocket and recover them from the settlement at the end — this is one of the major reasons the contingency-fee model exists.

4. The defence playbook on future care

The at-fault driver's insurer will produce competing expert evidence on every line item:

  • Defence physiatrist: prognosis is better, recovery more likely, attendant-care needs lower.
  • Defence occupational therapist: fewer hours of care, family-caregiver presumption, lower hourly rates.
  • Defence vocational consultant: residual earning capacity is higher, claimant can return to some form of work.
  • Defence economist: real discount rate should be higher, reducing the present-value calculation; life expectancy may be lower, reducing the duration.
  • Mitigation argument: did the claimant pursue all reasonable rehabilitation? Reductions for failure to mitigate are real.

The contested arithmetic produces a settlement range, typically with the plaintiff's number being 2-3x the defence number. The actual settlement lands somewhere in the middle, often at the higher end if the plaintiff's experts are credible and trial-ready.

5. Structured settlements

Many catastrophic-injury settlements are paid not as a lump sum but as a structured settlement — an annuity that pays the claimant a guaranteed monthly amount for life. The advantages: the income stream is tax-free under Canada Revenue Agency rules; the funds cannot be lost to investment risk; the structure provides for indexed increases to match medical-cost inflation.

The decision between a lump sum and a structured settlement is fact-specific. A claimant with strong financial literacy and access to professional management may prefer a lump sum. A claimant with cognitive impairment, family financial-management concerns, or a strong preference for predictable lifetime income usually chooses a structure. Some settlements blend both: a partial lump sum for one-time expenses (home modifications, vehicle, immediate medical) plus a structured component for lifetime attendant-care and ongoing medical.

6. The Section B accident-benefits backstop

Section B of the Alberta Standard Automobile Policy pays up to $50,000 in medical-payment benefits regardless of fault. For a catastrophic case, $50,000 is exhausted in the first weeks of acute care — nowhere close to lifetime needs. The tort claim against the at-fault driver is what carries the full future-care load. See our Section B explainer for how the two interact.

7. Why this is the slowest part of a catastrophic case

Future-care calculations require medical stability — a prognosis report cannot be written until the claimant has reached “maximum medical recovery” or “plateau.” For severe spinal cord injuries, this is typically 18-24 months post-injury. For severe TBI, 24-36 months. For complex orthopaedic injuries with multiple surgeries, 36-60 months.

Settling before plateau routinely undervalues catastrophic-injury files by millions of dollars. The single most expensive mistake in this corner of Alberta personal-injury practice is accepting an early settlement before the future-care picture has stabilized. Reputable plaintiff counsel will not let a catastrophic file settle until the prognosis report is in.

8. What an injured Albertan should do

  • If your injury is catastrophic, retain plaintiff-side personal-injury counsel immediately. The first 30 days set the trajectory of every expert report that follows.
  • Do not accept Section B exhaustion as the limit of your recovery. Section B is the floor, not the ceiling.
  • Do not settle the tort claim before the prognosis report is in. The financial difference between an early settlement and a properly built future-care case is routinely seven figures.
  • Choose a firm with documented experience in catastrophic-injury files. Future-care expert evidence is specialist work; not every personal-injury firm has the bench depth.

HurtCallMax matches Albertans with vetted personal-injury firms that have catastrophic-injury experience. The match is free. The lawyer consultation is free. See our screening criteria and how the $0 promise holds.

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Sources: Andrews v Grand & Toy Alberta Ltd, [1978] 2 SCR 229; Thornton v Prince George School Board, [1978] 2 SCR 267; Arnold v Teno, [1978] 2 SCR 287; Athey v Leonati, [1996] 3 SCR 458; Alberta Insurance Act, RSA 2000, c I-3; Standard Automobile Policy (SPF No. 1). Pattern observations based on HurtCallMax editorial review of catastrophic-injury Alberta Court of King's Bench published decisions on CanLII (2018-2026).

Related: Pain and Suffering and the SCC Trilogy Cap · Section B Accident Benefits Explained · Crumbling Skull vs Thin Skull in Alberta · Settlement Amounts by Injury Severity · How Adjusters Reduce Settlements.

Written by

HurtCallMax Editorial Team

Our editorial team brings together decades of experience in Alberta personal injury law to provide accurate, helpful information for injured Albertans. Every article is reviewed for legal accuracy and practical value.

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