What Is Disability Insurance? – Benefits & Why You Need It
Given sufficient time to prepare, humans anticipate and plan pretty well for planned life events, such as marriage, childbearing, and retirement. However, it’s difficult for most people to imagine — let alone prepare for — major, unexpected life changes.
Serious illnesses and injuries befall millions of Americans each year, often with little or no warning. Most working adults have some form of health insurance or health coverage to absorb costs associated with catastrophic medical events or ongoing treatments for chronic illnesses, such as cancer and diabetes. However, far more lack disability insurance coverage, which compensates the policyholder for income lost when they’re unable to perform some or all of their job duties due to a qualifying medical event or condition. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, only 39% of American workers had short-term disability insurance and 33% had long-term disability insurance in 2014.
In the relatively unlikely event that you experience a serious medical issue rendering you unable to work for a period of weeks, months, or even years, disability insurance can serve as a crucial financial backstop to help maintain your standard of living and reduce financial strain on your loved ones. Like all forms of insurance, disability coverage carries an ongoing cost, though some workers may pay little to nothing out of pocket for employer-sponsored plans.
Here’s a closer look at what disability insurance offers and how to choose the right policy for your needs.
Also known as income protection insurance, disability insurance comes in two forms: short-term disability insurance and long-term disability insurance. Though policy terms and coverages vary by issuer, what follows is a general overview of the key distinctions between the two.
Short-term disability (STD) policies provide income protection for workers temporarily unable to perform their job duties due to qualifying disabilities.
Each short-term disability claim is subject to a short elimination, or waiting, period that typically lasts one to two weeks, during which time the policyholder does not receive benefits. Following the elimination period, the policyholder receives benefits for a consecutive period of disability, usually lasting no more than 26 weeks. Benefits vary by policy and occupation but generally range between 50% and 70% of pre-disability income.
Short-term disability policies may not cover income loss related to on-the-job injuries. Those incidents are the province of workers’ compensation insurance.
Long-term disability (LTD) policies provide income protection for workers unable to perform their job duties over longer time periods.
Like short-term disability claims, LTD claims are subject to elimination periods. LTD elimination periods are longer than STD elimination periods, typically ranging between one and six months but sometimes as long as 12 to 24 months. Each LTD policy also has an accumulation period stretching twice the length of the elimination period. During the accumulation period, the policyholder must accrue sufficient cumulative disability time to exceed the elimination period. The policyholder need not be continuously disabled during the accumulation period, provided the elimination threshold is met.
Once the elimination period is met, benefits are payable either until the policyholder is no longer considered disabled or for the duration of the policy. Some LTD policies last for a set term ranging from two to 10 years, but many remain in force until the policyholder reaches age 65. Some may even continue after age 65, provided the policyholder continues working. Income replacement typically ranges up to 70% of pre-disability income and may be customizable.
Many workers have access to group disability insurance, which may carry lower premiums made possible by their employers’ or professional associations’ purchasing power.
Others — such as freelancers and solopreneurs who work outside of traditional employer-employee relationships or are not eligible for membership in professional associations — can procure disability insurance policies on the individual market.
Group disability insurance is most often available through employers and professional associations. The American Dental Association’s (ADA) group disability insurance is a good example of a group policy available to members of a professional guild rather than colleagues at a particular workplace.
Features & Customization
Group disability insurance policies are often customized to address the needs of the covered population. For instance, the ADA’s group disability policy offers:
Responsibility for Premiums
Depending on the preferences of the group sponsor — most often, the employer or professional association — premiums may be borne entirely by the group sponsor, entirely by the policyholder, or shared between the two. This has important tax consequences; when premiums are paid by the policyholder from after-tax funds, benefits may not be taxable. For information pertinent to your situation, consult a tax professional.
Service Wait
Some employer-sponsored group policies may impose a service wait. This is a probationary period during which recently hired employees are not eligible to file claims. Service waits typically last a few months.
Hours Worked Requirement
Some employer-sponsored group policies also impose hours worked requirements that may effectively exclude part-time employees from coverage. Hours worked requirements typically range from 24 to 32 hours per week, though amounts outside that range are not unheard of.
Individual disability insurance policies cover individual workers without access to suitable group insurance plans. Though their basic structure and features are similar to group disability insurance plans, they may impose higher premiums for comparable coverage and may not offer the same range of customization options.
Individual policyholders are responsible for paying their own premiums for individual disability insurance. If you’re a sole proprietor with a legal business structure, you may be able to pay your premiums out of before-tax earnings. Generally, hours worked requirements do not apply, as long as you can prove the income you wish to replace.
Disability insurers use a thorough underwriting process that takes three key considerations into account: applicant health, income and financial status, and occupation.
Given the high cost of replacing most of a policyholder’s income for months or years, the medical underwriting process is understandably rigorous. It usually comes in three parts:
Financial underwriting generally requires applicants to provide documented proof of income, such as:
Financial underwriting may be less onerous for employer-sponsored policy applicants and more involved for self-employed individuals. However, it’s important in all cases for applicants to provide thorough income documentation, as policy benefits are direct functions of income.
Finally, an applicant’s occupational class serves as an important determinant of risk. Occupations deemed more hazardous, such as certain manufacturing or outdoor occupations, are classed as higher risks than white-collar occupations, which are deemed less hazardous. Applicants in lower occupation classes may struggle to qualify for coverage, and those who do receive it may receive lower monthly indemnities than higher-class workers.
Following is a closer examination of key disability insurance coverage types, potential policy benefits, and common policy features.
Disability insurance comes in two main coverage types: any occupation and own occupation. The distinction between these coverage types is substantial, and prospective policyholders are advised to carefully consider the possible ramifications of their choice on lifetime earnings and professional attainment.
These are among the most common benefits of disability insurance policies. Some apply only to STD or LTD policies, while some pertain to both.
Prospective policyholders should mind these important disability insurance features. Some apply either to STD or LTD, while some apply to both.
Every worker’s situation is unique. However, you can apply common best practices and strategies when choosing a disability insurance policy — and determining whether disability insurance makes financial and practical sense for you in the first place. Here are some questions to ask yourself.
You should maintain three types of savings: emergency, retirement, and personal. As a rule of thumb, your emergency savings reserves should amount to at least three months’ income. The ideal emergency reserve amounts to more like six months’ income.
Incidentally, six months is about as long as you can expect an STD policy to replace your income in the event that you become disabled. Rather than pay the monthly premium for an individual STD policy you may never need, consider instead making equivalent monthly deposits into an FDIC-insured savings account, money market account, or certificate of deposit. If you’re temporarily unable to work at some point in the future, you can always dip into that fund to cover necessary expenses.
This logic applies only to STD policies that demand out-of-pocket premiums. If your employer offers an STD policy as a fringe benefit with no employee contribution required, there’s no financial downside to enrolling.
Even frugal people have to pay bills. If you have major recurring expenses or debts that cannot easily be deferred, refinanced, or forgiven, disability insurance may serve as a key financial safety net for you and your family. Such debts and expenses might include:
It never hurts to contact your lenders for information about hardship programs that may temporarily reduce or eliminate your monthly payments. However, there is no guarantee that your situation will qualify as a hardship, or that the reprieve will obviate the need for disability insurance.
As the cost of education continues to rise and employer demand for workers with advanced degrees grows, Americans are spending more than ever on professional development.
Members of professional guilds, such as medical doctors and architects, spend especially large sums on their educations. According to the Association of American Medical Colleges, average out-of-state tuition at public medical schools was $58,668 for the 2016 to 2017 school year, or $234,672 over four years. An LTD insurance policy’s benefits can salvage that investment, even if the post-disability return is lower.
Early in your career, the cumulative financial and professional impacts of partial or total disability can be devastating. While unfortunate, late-career disability is unlikely to damage your financial or professional position to the same extent. If you’ve passed age 59.5, you may be permitted to withdraw funds from your tax-advantaged retirement accounts without incurring a tax penalty, though you’ll still need to pay taxes on withdrawals from certain account types.
If you have a healthy balance in your retirement fund, you may wish to entrust income replacement to your nest egg and forgo a new disability insurance policy, whose premiums are likely to be higher than those on new policies issued to younger workers.
If you’re the sole or primary breadwinner in your household, your family may depend on your disability benefits for basic necessities, such as secure housing, clothing, and sustenance. Though your family may be eligible for certain public safety net programs, these may not be sufficient to cover its living expenses. Moreover, key programs, such as housing assistance, may have years-long waiting lists.
Notwithstanding the potentially rigorous medical underwriting process, workers with preexisting medical conditions that increase their risk of temporary or permanent disability may be more inclined to apply for LTD coverage than their healthy peers. Job-seekers with preexisting conditions may want to pursue employers that offer no-exam group disability insurance, if common in their fields.
Out-of-pocket disability insurance premiums vary widely, from virtually nothing to hundreds of dollars per month. Your policy’s premium is a function of its benefit amount, term, and key features, such as the elimination period and whether it offers any or own occupation coverage. As a rough rule of thumb, try to keep your total premium under 2% of your gross income from employment — for instance, $1,000 annually on a $50,000 salary before taxes.
Disability insurance isn’t the only possible source of direct financial assistance for workers unable to perform their job duties due to partial or total disability. It isn’t even the only possible source of replacement income for disabled workers. Those with sufficiently long service records may qualify for Social Security disability (SSDI) administered by the federal Social Security Administration. The Social Security Administration’s SSDI website has more details about qualifying conditions, service requirements, eligibility, and waiting periods for SSDI applicants.
Do you have a disability insurance policy? Why or why not?
Updated: September 24, 2018
Categories: Careers, Insurance, Money Management
Brian Martucci writes about frugal living, entrepreneurship, and innovative ideas. When he’s not interviewing small business owners or investigating time- and money-saving strategies for Money Crashers readers, he’s probably out exploring a new trail or sampling a novel cuisine. Find him on Twitter @Brian_Martucci.
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What Is Disability Insurance? – Benefits & Why You Need It
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