If you run a small business in Alberta, insurance is probably the thing you keep meaning to look into but never quite get around to. Most owners are busy chasing invoices and keeping customers happy, not reading policy documents. But a fire, a lawsuit, or a stolen laptop can undo years of work if you’re not covered. Small Business Insurance
Summary: Small business insurance in Edmonton costs $450–$1,000 yearly but choosing the wrong plan, skipping business interruption coverage, or assuming home insurance covers your business can lead to denied claims worth $30,000–$100,000+. This guide covers the six most common mistakes Edmonton business owners make and how to get the right commercial coverage from Reliant Insurance Brokers. Edmonton Small Business Insurance:
Summary: Third-party insurance is Canada’s legal minimum, covering only damage you cause to others — not your own vehicle. Comprehensive insurance adds protection for theft, weather, fire, and at-fault crashes. Your choice depends on car age, value, location, financing status, and financial risk tolerance. Reliant Insurance compares quotes from top Canadian insurers. Third-Party vs Comprehensive Insurance: What Canadian Drivers Must
Summary: Wealth management in Canada combines investing, tax reduction, retirement planning, insurance protection, and estate planning into one integrated financial strategy. Only 36% of Canadians meet retirement goals — a wealth management plan addresses this through holistic planning. Learn how it differs from basic financial planning, who needs it, and how Reliant Insurance helps build long-term financial security. Wealth Management
Summary: Collision coverage pays for damage when your car hits another vehicle, guardrail, or object — including icy-road crashes in Alberta. Comprehensive coverage protects against hail, falling branches, cracked windshields, animal strikes, and theft even while parked. Most winter drivers in Edmonton and Sherwood Park need both. Comprehensive vs Collision Coverage: What Alberta Drivers Need to Know Alberta’s extreme weather
Summary: Electric vehicles can lose 14%–39% of their driving range in Alberta’s −30°C winters. Standard towing can permanently damage EV motors, making flatbed towing essential. This guide covers cold-weather EV challenges, battery preservation tips, and how specialized EV insurance protects Edmonton drivers. Electric Cars in Cold Weather: Challenging Alberta’s Extreme Winters Alberta winters routinely hit −30°C — conditions that fundamentally