Sun Life

Website: sunlife.ca

Head office address (Canada): 227 King Street South, Waterloo, ON N2J 1R2

Year established: 1865

Ownership structure: subsidiary of publicly traded Sun Life Financial Inc. (TSX: SLF; NYSE: SLF); federally regulated by OSFI

Target market/client profile: Canadian employers, plan sponsors, group plan members and their dependants, individual Canadians, and advisors seeking group benefits, group retirement services, individual insurance, and investment solutions

Number of professional staff: more than 68,000 employees globally; around 2,700 advisors across more than 1,100 communities in Canada

Canadian office locations: Waterloo (Canadian head office), Toronto, Montreal

Sun Life is a publicly traded Canadian financial services organization and one of the country's oldest insurers. Headquartered in Waterloo, it operates across 28 markets and serves more than 85 million clients worldwide. The company says it became the number one provider in the Canadian group benefits market in 2010.

History of Sun Life

The firm began as a Montreal insurance company in 1865, founded by local businessman Mathew Hamilton Gault. Poor economic conditions delayed the start, so the company opened for business in 1871.

It launched under the name Sun Mutual Life Insurance Company of Montreal. The company adopted its enduring operating name, Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada, in 1882.

Early expansion and a Canadian first

The firm expanded well beyond Canada's borders within decades of its founding. By 1920, it operated in 55 countries, including Hong Kong, the UK, and the Philippines.

Back home in 1919, the firm says it became the first company in Canada to offer group life insurance. It grew quickly into a major provider of group benefit plans in Canada and the US.

Structural shifts and the MFS acquisition

Sun Life became a mutual company in 1962 after a process that bought back all outstanding shares for $65 million. Policyholders then voted in 1978 to shift the corporate headquarters from Montreal to Toronto.

In 1982, the company acquired Massachusetts Financial Services (MFS), a Boston-based investment manager founded in 1924.

Going public and growing in Canada

The company reversed its mutual structure in 2000 and listed shares on the TSX, NYSE, and Philippine Stock Exchange. One year later, it announced a merger with Clarica Life Insurance Company, a Waterloo-based Canadian insurer.

In 2010, the company launched Sun Life Global Investments (SLGI) to bring investment products to Canadian plan sponsors and retail investors.

Sun Life's latest health and investment milestones

In May 2026, SLGI expanded its Granite target date fund lineup with a new predominantly passive option for Canadian plan sponsors. The launch extended SLGI's reach into passive strategies, more than 15 years after the original Granite series debuted.

Sun Life also added menopause care to its group benefits platform through a partnership with Dialogue, a Canadian digital health company. The program connects plan members to menopause-trained clinicians and personalized care plans through Lumino Health Virtual Care.

Sun Life Canada products and services

The company’s Canadian operations span group benefits, group retirement services, and investment solutions for employers and plan members:

Sun Life Group Benefits

  • health and dental: coverage for employees and dependants
  • group life insurance: group coverage for employees
  • disability management: short- and long-term disability
  • rehabilitation services: support during disability recovery
  • Lumino Health Virtual Care: 24/7 virtual health access
  • mental health: workplace wellness and counselling tools
  • plan sustainability: affordable and sustainable plan support
  • DE&I initiatives: coverage for diverse workforces
  • organizational health consulting: workplace health strategy support
  • fraud risk management: plan protection and oversight

Group Retirement Services

  • group RRSP: employer-sponsored retirement savings
  • DC RPP: defined contribution pension plan
  • DPSP: employer-funded profit sharing
  • VRSP: Quebec voluntary retirement savings
  • DB Invo services: defined benefit investment solution
  • Choices Flex: flexible group retirement option
  • Sun Life MyRetirement Income: retirement income and decumulation
  • Sun Life Essentials: group plans for small businesses
  • SunAdvantage: group savings and retirement plan
  • Sun Life One Plan: integrated health and retirement platform

Sun Life Global Investments

  • mutual funds: actively managed investment portfolios
  • ETF Series: actively managed ETF strategies
  • segregated funds: funds with insurance protection
  • GICs: guaranteed interest rate savings
  • payout annuities: guaranteed lifetime income payments

Beyond these employer-facing products, Sun Life also offers individual Canadians term and permanent life, health, critical illness, disability, long-term care, and travel insurance coverage.

Leadership and governance

Jessica Tan serves as EVP and president of Sun Life Canada (SLC). Tan was co-CEO of Ping An and a McKinsey partner before moving to Sun Life. She holds a master's and two bachelor's degrees from MIT across electrical engineering, computer science, and economics.

Tan leads the company alongside a team of senior executives:

  • Marie-Chantal Côté as SVP, Sun Life Health
  • Michael Van Alphen as SVP, Group Retirement Services
  • Oricia Smith as president, SLGI Asset Management Inc., and SVP, investment solutions
  • Greg Dilworth as SVP and CFO, SLC
  • Rowena Chan as president, Sun Life Financial Distributors (Canada) Inc., and SVP, retail advice and solutions
  • Dave Keirstead as SVP, operations, SLC

The leadership team operates under the oversight of Sun Life Financial Inc., its publicly traded parent. The company maintains a Code of Conduct that sets ethical and professional standards for all employees and advisors.

Client base and market focus

Sun Life says it serves more than five million Canadians across individual, group, and institutional markets. The company reaches plan sponsors and individual Canadians through nearly 2,700 advisors in more than 1,100 communities throughout Canada.

Regional offices across the country handle claims adjudication, disability management, and rehabilitation services for group benefits clients.

Sun Life's Group Retirement Services also tracks workplace savings data to support plan sponsors and advisors. In March 2026, the company published research on the gender retirement savings gap within Canadian workplace plans. It says women in its plans retire with an average of $164,000 saved, compared to $225,000 for men.

Plan sponsors and advisors can also find Sun Life listed in our Money Managers Directory and SRI/ESG Directory.

Awards, recognition, and industry involvement

Sun Life has earned awards from Benefits and Pensions Monitor (BPM) and other organizations, alongside contributions to philanthropy and industry dialogue.

Awards and recognition

  • Global 100 Most Sustainable Corporations (2026): first among Canadian insurers
  • Best 50 Corporate Citizens in Canada (2025): second among Canadian insurance peers
  • Dow Jones Sustainability North America Index (2024): 19 consecutive years of inclusion
  • Best Workplaces in Canada (2025): recognized for workplace practices
  • Order of Excellence for Mental Health at Work (2024): mental health workplace recognition
  • BPM Hot List 2025: featured Fiona Tam and Satwik Misra
  • BPM Elite Women (2025): featured Marie-Chantal Côté
  • BPM Elite Women (2024): featured Côté and Anne Meloche
  • BPM Hot List 2024: featured Meloche and Côté

Community and industry involvement

Sun Life's biggest community program focuses on diabetes prevention and care. Since 2012, the company has committed more than $64.9 million to diabetes-focused programs worldwide. In Canada, that includes partnerships with:

  • hospital foundations
  • YMCA chapters
  • Spirit North (an Indigenous youth health initiative)

Company leaders also contribute to industry discussions through BPM. In 2024, Anne Meloche and Michael Carter joined a BPM roundtable on retirement income solutions for Canadian plan sponsors. That conversation addressed Canada's DC pension gap and retirement income planning challenges.

The latest Sun Life news

Poor sleep costs Canadian workers nearly 7 productive hours a week, survey finds

Employers are underestimating a problem that is already showing up in absences and lost productivity

Sun Life denied half of complex Canadian Dental Care Plan claims without explanation

Patients and dentists say unexplained rejections for crowns and dentures are undermining federal dental plan

Sun Life launches digital savings platform for Canadian SME market

VP explains how Sun Life Essentials aims to tackle 'inertia' among Canadian workers

Tribunal sides with Canada Life in benefits fraud case

Former employee lacked 'clear, convincing and cogent evidence' to support allegations of discrimination, says tribunal

Four firms join NIA's pension research platform

Asset managers and pension plans expand the PCE's cross-sector membership

Canada's retirement age just hit a 20-year high

And most Canadians are navigating it alone

Majority of Canadian workers want employer savings plans but most don't have one

Sun Life's new poll lays bare how far employer savings coverage falls short

US equities aren’t the problem, portfolio concentration is, says Amundi SVP

Alec Murray explains why blending large caps with overlooked stocks may be the smarter US equity trade

Seven in ten Canadian workers say their benefits don't help with chronic care

New report finds benefit plans are leaving the sickest employees behind

Sun Life adds passive funds to Granite target date lineup

The new option keeps private market exposure while lowering costs