Mental Health Rights in Canada
Reviewed by the Commoner Law Editorial Team. Sourced from Canadian federal statutes and official sources. Provincial information reflects each province's own legislation and court rulings. Written in plain language for general understanding — this is educational content, not legal advice. Our editorial standards
What is this right?
All 13 provinces and territories have their own mental health legislation. Involuntary commitment (or certification) typically requires three elements:
- A mental disorder is present
- There's a risk of serious harm to the person or others
- The person cannot be assessed or treated voluntarily
Initial holds vary. Ontario typically allows a 72-hour assessment before formal certification. BC's first hold is 48 hours. Lengths and renewal rules continue to differ from there.
The most important provincial divergence is on treatment consent. In Ontario, a capable patient can refuse treatment even while involuntarily detained — that line was confirmed by the Supreme Court in Starson v. Swayze (2003). In BC, the facility director can override the refusal. Same Charter, different provincial frameworks, very different lived experiences.
Anyone involuntarily committed has the right to a lawyer, a review board hearing, and periodic reviews. Some provinces also use Community Treatment Orders for supervised treatment outside hospital.
When does it apply?
- Anyone subject to involuntary psychiatric assessment or admission in Canada.
- Anyone receiving mental health treatment, voluntary or otherwise.
What to Do If You Are Involuntarily Committed to a Psychiatric Facility in Canada
The first hours of any involuntary admission shape what happens next. Know the rights and use them.
- Insist on being told your rights. They have to be explained on admission.
- Get a lawyer or legal aid immediately. Do not wait.
- Apply for a review board hearing. In Ontario, the Consent and Capacity Board must hear it within 7 days.
- Designate a power of attorney for personal care in advance so your treatment wishes are honoured if capacity fails.
- Family members can request a physician assessment if someone they care about is at risk.
What should you NOT do?
- Don't assume civil rights vanish on admission. They don't — the right to vote, the right to counsel, and the rest survive.
- Don't miss the review-board window. Filing quickly is what challenges the detention.
- Don't assume the consent rules in your province match somewhere else. They diverge sharply.
- Don't confuse police apprehension under mental-health law with a criminal arrest. Being brought to hospital is a health matter, not a charge.
Use the jurisdiction bar at the top of the page to pick your province — you'll see how provincial law differs from Canadian federal law.
6 provinces available
Common Questions
When does mental health rights apply?
Anyone subject to involuntary psychiatric assessment or admission in Canada.Anyone receiving mental health treatment, voluntary or otherwise.
What should I do if I or a family member in Canada is being held in a psychiatric facility against their will?
The first hours of any involuntary admission shape what happens next. Know the rights and use them.Insist on being told your rights. They have to be explained on admission.Get a lawyer or legal aid immediately. Do not wait.Apply for a review board hearing. In Ontario, the Consent and Capacity Board must hear it within 7 days.Designate a power of attorney for personal care in advance so your treatment wishes are honoured if capacity fails.Family members can request a physician assessment if someone they care about is at risk.
What mistakes should I avoid with mental health rights?
Don't assume civil rights vanish on admission. They don't — the right to vote, the right to counsel, and the rest survive.Don't miss the review-board window. Filing quickly is what challenges the detention.Don't assume the consent rules in your province match somewhere else. They diverge sharply.Don't confuse police apprehension under mental-health law with a criminal arrest. Being brought to hospital is a health matter, not a charge.
Mental Health Rights in other states
Same topic, different jurisdiction. Pick the one that applies to you.