Long-Term Disability
Can You Work, Volunteer, or Travel While on LTD in BC? What Claimants Need to Know Before an Insurer Uses It Against Them
If you are on long-term disability and trying to hold onto some version of ordinary life, this question can become stressful very quickly.
Maybe you tried a bit of work to see what you could handle. Maybe you helped someone out. Maybe you took a short trip, went to a family event, or posted a photo online. Then the insurer starts asking different questions. The tone changes. The file feels tighter.
That is when many people begin to worry.
Not because they were trying to do something wrong, but because they begin to see the real problem. The issue is not always the activity itself. The issue is whether the insurer will try to use that activity as proof that you can work.
In British Columbia, that distinction matters. A brief outing, a failed work attempt, a volunteer shift, or a short trip does not automatically mean you can return to reliable employment. But if the insurer builds that story and the full context is missing, your claim can become much more vulnerable.
If that is starting to happen in your file, you do not have to guess your way through it. Call Tim Louis for a free consultation at (604) 732-7678 or email timlouis@timlouislaw.com.
Quick answer
Yes, some people on LTD may still do limited activities.
But that does not mean the insurer will view those activities fairly.
The real question is not whether you worked, volunteered, travelled, or went out once. The real question is whether the insurer will try to use that activity to argue that you can work in a reliable, ongoing, and sustainable way.
That is why context matters so much. A short activity, a failed work attempt, or a brief trip may say very little about whether you can manage the pace, attendance, concentration, stamina, and recovery that real work requires.
If your insurer is already focusing on your activities, asking for updated evidence, or moving your claim toward review, this may be the point where legal advice matters most.
Why this question is more dangerous than it sounds
A lot of people think this is a simple permission question.
Am I allowed to do a little work?
Am I allowed to volunteer?
Am I allowed to travel?
But in many LTD claims, that is not the real issue.
The bigger problem is how the insurer interprets what you did. A short activity may be treated as evidence that you are more capable than your medical records suggest. A work attempt may be used to argue that you can return to employment. A trip or social post may be pulled out of context and used to question how serious your restrictions really are.
That is why this issue can become serious before there is a formal denial. The file may start tightening first. The insurer may ask narrower questions, focus more heavily on daily activity, or look harder for reasons to say you can work.
The danger is not always the activity itself.
The danger is the story the insurer may try to build around it.
Doing something once is not the same as being able to work reliably
This is one of the most important distinctions in an LTD claim.
Being able to do something briefly is not the same as being able to hold a job. Real work usually requires consistency. It requires showing up, staying focused, keeping pace, managing symptoms, and recovering well enough to do it again the next day and the day after that.
Many people with legitimate disabilities can still do some things some of the time. They may manage a short outing, a limited task, or even a brief work attempt. But that does not automatically mean they can sustain employment in any realistic way.
That is where claims often become vulnerable. An insurer may focus on the visible activity and ignore the larger pattern. It may overlook the pain, fatigue, brain fog, emotional strain, symptom flare, or recovery time that followed. It may treat one moment of effort as if it proves dependable work capacity.
But those are not the same thing.
The question is not only, âWhat did you do?â The deeper question is, âWhat did it cost you, and could you truly repeat it in a real job on a reliable basis?â
That is often where the real dispute begins.
How insurers may look at trying to work
Trying to work while on LTD can be one of the most misunderstood parts of a claim.
Some people try limited work because they genuinely want to see whether they can manage it. Some do it because they feel pressure from the insurer or employer. Others do it because they want to keep some connection to routine, dignity, or income.
The problem is that an insurer may focus on the fact that you tried, rather than on whether the attempt actually worked.
A short or unsuccessful work attempt may be used to suggest that you are capable of employment, even if the attempt led to exhaustion, pain, cognitive strain, emotional worsening, or a setback that made it clear the work was not sustainable. The insurer may treat the attempt itself as evidence while giving much less weight to what it cost you afterward.
That is why context matters so much. A failed attempt to work is not the same as a successful return to work. In some cases, it may show the opposite.
How insurers may look at volunteering
Volunteering can seem safer than paid work because there is no income attached to it. But from an insurerâs point of view, that is not always the part that matters most.
What may matter more is what the activity appears to show.
If the volunteer role looks structured, regular, physically demanding, cognitively demanding, or similar to the kind of tasks done in a job, the insurer may try to use it as evidence that you have more functional capacity than your claim suggests. The fact that you were unpaid does not necessarily prevent that argument.
That does not mean volunteering automatically harms a claim. It does mean the details matter. What did you actually do? How often? For how long? What did it cost you afterward? Could you truly have repeated it in a work setting?
Those questions matter more than the label.
How insurers may look at travelling
Travel can also raise concern, especially when the insurer is already reviewing the file closely.
A trip may look simple from the outside. But what the insurer sees and what the trip actually meant for you may be very different things.
An insurer may try to use travel as evidence of stamina, planning ability, physical function, or general capacity. It may point to the fact that you left home, managed transportation, attended events, or appeared active. But that may say very little about the full reality. It may not show how much preparation the trip required, whether you needed help, how limited the activity really was, or how much recovery time it took afterward.
A short trip does not automatically mean someone can meet the pace, attendance, concentration, and endurance demands of work.
Again, the real issue is not simply whether you travelled. It is whether the insurer will try to turn that trip into a broader story about work capacity that the full picture does not support.
How insurers may look at surveillance
Surveillance can feel especially upsetting because it turns ordinary moments into something that looks like evidence.
An insurer may rely on a short video clip, a few observations, or selected images to suggest that you are more capable than your claim indicates. But surveillance usually captures only fragments. It may show that you did something once. It often does not show how much pain, fatigue, anxiety, brain fog, or recovery time came with it. It also does not necessarily show whether the activity was repeatable or whether you could have done it reliably in a real work setting.
That is where surveillance can become misleading. A few visible moments may be used to support a much broader argument about work capacity, even when the fuller medical picture points in the opposite direction.
This does not mean surveillance should be ignored. It should be taken seriously. But it also should not be treated as if it automatically proves you can return to work.
If your insurer is already raising surveillance or activity concerns, this is often the point where early legal advice can help.
Why this gets riskier around the 24-month mark
For many LTD claimants, this issue becomes more serious as the claim approaches the 24-month point.
That is because many policies shift at that stage from asking whether you can do your own job to asking whether the insurer thinks you can do some other occupation you are reasonably suited for. Once that change happens, the insurer may look more aggressively at anything it believes supports employability.
That can include work attempts, volunteering, travel, social media, or surveillance. An activity that once seemed minor may suddenly be folded into a broader argument that you can do some form of alternate work.
This is one reason the 24-month stage feels so stressful. The file is no longer being judged only against the demands of your own role. The insurer may now be looking for signs that you can function in some other job, even if that interpretation does not reflect the full reality of your condition.
If your claim is approaching that point, the details matter more, not less.
What to document if you tried activity and it affected your condition
If you tried some activity and it made your symptoms worse, the details may matter more than the activity itself.
A brief work attempt, a volunteer shift, a trip, or even an outing may look one way from the outside and feel very different in real life. That is why it helps to document what actually happened, not just the fact that it happened.
Try to keep track of:
- what the activity involved
- how long it lasted
- how much preparation it required
- what happened afterward
- whether your pain, fatigue, anxiety, or cognitive symptoms worsened
- how long recovery took
- whether the effort was repeatable
- whether your doctor knows about it
This is not about creating perfect paperwork for every part of your life. It is about making sure that if an activity becomes part of the file, it is not left standing on its own without the context that gives it real meaning.
When this stops being a question and becomes a legal issue
A lot of people wait too long because they assume they should only call a lawyer after a formal denial.
In reality, the problem may become legal sooner than that.
If the insurer is asking targeted questions about your activities, raising surveillance, changing the tone of the file, pushing updated forms more aggressively, or treating limited activity as proof that you can work, the claim may already be moving into more serious territory. The same is true if the 24-month review is approaching and the insurer seems to be building a broader argument about employability.
This is often the stage where people feel unsure how to respond. They do not want to say the wrong thing. They do not want to make the file worse. They may also sense that the insurer is drawing conclusions that do not reflect the full reality of their condition.
That is usually a sign that the issue has moved beyond a simple question about activity. It has become a question about how your claim is being framed, what evidence the insurer is relying on, and whether the file is starting to narrow in a way that puts your benefits at risk.
If that sounds familiar, call Tim Louis at (604) 732-7678 or email timlouis@timlouislaw.com for a free consultation.
Why claimants in Vancouver call Tim Louis at this stage
When an LTD claim starts to tighten, people often need more than general information. They need clear advice about what may be happening in their file and what to do next.
Tim Louis helps claimants in Vancouver and across British Columbia when insurers begin questioning restrictions, focusing on activity, raising surveillance, or pushing claims toward review, cutoff, or denial. His approach is practical and direct. The goal is to understand the pressure point in the file and respond with a clearer picture of what your condition actually allows.
For many people, that clarity matters before the insurer makes its final move, not only after.
Common questions about activity while on LTD in BC
Can you work while on LTD in BC?
Sometimes people do try limited work while on LTD. But the real issue is not whether some work happened once. The issue is whether the insurer will treat that attempt as proof of reliable work capacity, even if the effort was limited, unsuccessful, or followed by a setback.
Does volunteering affect LTD benefits?
It can, depending on how the insurer interprets it. A volunteer role may be used to argue that you have more functional capacity than your claim suggests, especially if the role looks structured, demanding, or similar to employment.
Can travel hurt an LTD claim?
Travel does not automatically mean you can return to work. But insurers may try to use it as evidence of stamina or function if the full context is not clear.
Can social media be used against you in an LTD file?
Sometimes, yes. A photo or post may show only one moment and leave out the pain, fatigue, recovery time, or symptom flare that followed.
What if surveillance shows me doing normal activities?
Surveillance does not automatically prove you can work. It may show that you did something once, but that is not the same as showing that you can work consistently, sustainably, and reliably.
Does the 24-month review change how activity is judged?
It can. Around the 24-month point, insurers often start asking whether you can do some other occupation, not just your own job. That can make limited activity more significant in the file.
Should I talk to a lawyer before answering insurer questions about my activity?
In many cases, yes. If the insurer is already focusing on what you have done and using it to question your restrictions or work capacity, legal advice may help you understand the risk before the file tightens further.
If your insurer is using work, volunteering, travel, or surveillance to question your claim, get clarity early
If your insurer is reviewing your activities, questioning your restrictions, or moving your claim toward a cutoff, you do not have to guess what it means.
This is often the point where clear advice can make a real difference.
Call Tim Louis for a free consultation at (604) 732-7678.
Email timlouis@timlouislaw.com.
Office: 2526 West 5th Ave, Vancouver, BC V6K 1T1.
If your LTD claim is under pressure, get practical guidance on what may be happening in your file and what to do next.
Further Reading
LTD Surveillance in BC
A practical look at how surveillance can affect a long-term disability claim, and why a short clip or isolated activity does not always show reliable work capacity.
24-Month LTD Change of Definition in BC
Explains the shift from âown occupationâ to âany occupationâ and why the 24-month point can become a major pressure stage in an LTD claim.
Denied LTD in BC
A strong next read for people whose insurer has already denied or cut off benefits, or whose file is moving in that direction.
Denied LTD in BC When You Are Self-Employed
Helpful for self-employed claimants dealing with denials, documentation issues, and pressure around work capacity.
Chemo Brain and Cognitive LTD Claims in BC
Useful for readers whose insurer is questioning concentration, memory, mental stamina, or other cognitive limits.
Invisible Illness LTD Claims in BC
A good support piece for claimants whose symptoms are real but not always visible to employers, insurers, or other observers.
Mental Health Long-Term Disability in BC
Relevant for claimants dealing with anxiety, depression, PTSD, stress-related disability, or other mental health conditions that may be misunderstood or minimized.
How to Maximize Your LTD Appeal Success After a Denial
A practical follow-up for readers who are already thinking about next steps after a denied claim.
Trying to Work While on LTD in BC? What Can Put Your Benefits at Risk
A strong supporting article from the LTD satellite focused on work attempts, risk, and insurer interpretation.
Cut Off at 24 Months? Your Any-Occupation Survival Plan (BC)
A focused support article on what happens as the claim moves into the any-occupation stage.
Denied Long-Term Disability in BC
A helpful educational support page on the satellite for readers whose claim has already been denied or terminated.




