Ontario Trillium Drug Program
If your household spends a large portion of its income on prescription drugs, the Trillium Drug Program caps your out-of-pocket costs at about 4% of your income. After that, you pay $2 per prescription. Free to apply, no income limit.
Which Drug Program Is Right for You?
Ontario has several prescription drug programs. Tell us your situation and we will point you to the right one.
How It Works
The Trillium Drug Program is not free prescriptions. It is a safety net that makes sure your drug costs never eat up more than about 4% of your household income.
Example:
Annual deductible: ~$2,000 (4% of $50,000)
Quarterly deductible: ~$500
In Q1, you buy $600 in prescriptions. You pay $500 out of pocket (your deductible), and then pay only $2 per prescription for the remaining $100 worth of drugs. In Q2, if you only buy $300 in prescriptions, you pay all $300, and the unused $200 carries to Q3.
The quarterly periods run August 1 to October 31, November 1 to January 31, February 1 to April 30, and May 1 to July 31.
Who Qualifies
You qualify if all of these are true:
You are NOT eligible if:
If You Have Partial Private Insurance
If your private insurance covers some but not all of your drug costs, you can still enrol in the Trillium Drug Program. Trillium works alongside your private plan by covering the portion your insurance does not pay, after your Trillium deductible is met.
When you apply, you must report your private insurance details. The program will calculate your deductible based on your out-of-pocket costs (the part your insurance does not cover), not the total cost of the drugs.
You should use your private insurance first for every prescription. Then submit receipts for the remaining cost to Trillium. Your pharmacist can coordinate this at the counter if you provide both your health card and your private insurance information.
How to Apply
What Drugs Are Covered
Trillium covers drugs listed in the Ontario Drug Benefit Formulary. This is a list of over 5,900 medications approved by the province. It includes most common prescriptions: antibiotics, blood pressure medications, diabetes medications, mental health medications, pain management, asthma inhalers, HIV medications, and many others.
Not every medication is on the list. Brand-name drugs are sometimes excluded if a generic equivalent exists. Newer drugs may not yet be listed. Before enrolling, confirm with your pharmacist or doctor that the specific medication you need is on the formulary.
If your medication is not on the formulary, your doctor can apply to the Exceptional Access Program (EAP) for special approval. This involves submitting a clinical justification to the Ministry of Health explaining why no formulary-listed alternative works for your condition.
Search the Ontario Drug Benefit Formulary βOntario's Other Drug Programs
Trillium is one of several Ontario drug programs. Here is how they compare.
π OHIP+ (Under 25)
Covers 5,900+ drugs for anyone 24 or under who does not have private insurance. No application needed. Just show your health card at the pharmacy.
π΄ Ontario Drug Benefit (65+)
Automatic at age 65. Small co-pay per prescription. Covers the same formulary drugs. You receive a letter before your 65th birthday.
πΏ Trillium Drug Program
For anyone 25-64 without full private coverage. Caps drug costs at 4% of household income. $2 per Rx after the deductible. Covers the same formulary.
π€ Ontario Works / ODSP
Prescription drug coverage is included in social assistance benefits. No separate application needed.
Renewal and Changes
Renewal: Your enrolment renews automatically every year as long as you file your income taxes on time. You will receive a new confirmation letter each year showing your updated deductible (based on your most recent tax filing). If you do not file taxes, your enrolment may be paused until your taxes are up to date.
Income changes: If your income drops by more than 10% (job loss, reduced hours, etc.), you can request a deductible reassessment. This lowers your quarterly payments based on your current income rather than your last tax filing. Apply through the reassessment form on ontario.ca or call 1-800-575-5386.
Insurance changes: If you gain or lose private insurance during the year, notify the Trillium Drug Program so they can recalculate your coverage.
Turning 65: When you turn 65, you are automatically moved to the Ontario Drug Benefit program. A spouse under 65 can remain on Trillium.