Home Financial Center Disability Insurance The Fundamentals of Disability Insurance
The Fundamentals of Disability Insurance | Print |

 

Disability insurance pays benefits when you are unable to earn a living because you are sick or injured. Most disability policies pay you a benefit that replaces a percentage of your earned income when you can't work.

Why would you need disability insurance?

Your chances of being disabled for longer than three months are much greater than your chances of dying prematurely, due in part to medicine that has made many fatal illnesses treatable. (Source: 1985 Commissioner's Individual Disability Table A--most recent data available.) Although this is good news, it increases your need to protect your income with disability insurance.

Consider what might happen if you suffered an injury or illness and couldn't work for days, months, or even years. If you're single, do you have other means of support? If you're married, you may be able to rely on your spouse for income, but you probably also have many financial obligations, such as supporting your children and paying your mortgage. Could your spouse's income support your whole family? In addition, remember that you don't have to be working in a hazardous position to need disability insurance. Accidents happen not only on the job but also at home, and illness can strike anyone.

If you own a business, disability insurance can help protect you in several ways. First, you can purchase an individual policy that will protect your own income. You can also purchase key person insurance designed to protect you from the impact that losing an important employee would have on your business. Finally, you can purchase a disability insurance policy that will enable you to buy your partner's business interest in the event that he or she becomes disabled.

What do you need to know about disability insurance?

Once you become disabled and apply for benefits, you have to wait for a certain amount of time after the onset of your disability before you receive benefits. If you are applying for benefits under a private insurance policy, this amount of time (known as the elimination period) ranges from 30 to 365 days, although the most common period is 90 days. Group insurance policies through your employer will generally have a waiting period of no more than 8 days for short-term policies that pay benefits for up to six months, and 90 days for long-term policies that pay benefits up to age 65.

You can purchase private disability income insurance policies that offer lifetime coverage, but they are very expensive. Most people buy policies that pay benefits up until age 65; however, two- and five-year benefit periods are also available. Because many injuries or illnesses do not totally disable you, many policies will offer a rider that will pay you a partial benefit if you can work part time and earn some income.

Where can you get disability insurance?

In general, disability insurance can be split into two types: private insurance (individual or group policies purchased from an insurance company), and government insurance (social insurance provided through state or federal governments).

Private disability insurance refers to disability insurance that you purchase through an insurance company. Many types of private disability insurance exist, including individual disability income policies, group policies, group association policies, and riders attached to life insurance policies. Depending on the type of policy chosen, private disability policies usually offer more comprehensive benefits to insured individuals than social insurance. Individually owned disability income policies may offer the most coverage (at a greater cost), followed by group policies offered by an employer or association. Check with your employer or professional association to see if you are eligible to participate in a group plan. If not, contact your insurance broker to look into individual coverage.

Workers' compensation and Social Security are two well-known government disability insurance programs. In addition, five states (California, Hawaii, New Jersey, New York, and Rhode Island) have mandatory disability insurance programs that provide disability benefits to residents. If you are a civil service worker, a military service member, or other federal, state, or local government employee, many disability programs are set up to benefit you. In general, however, government disability insurance programs are designed to provide limited benefits under restrictive terms, and you should not rely on them (as many people mistakenly do) as your main source of income if you are disabled.

 

Copyright 2006-2011 Forefield Inc. All rights reserved.

 

Senior Health Directory

 

Senior Health Directory

Select Your State!

new mexico Texas Arizona California Nevada Utah Oregon Washington Alaska hawaii Idaho Montana Wyoming Colorado North Dakota South Dakota Nebraska Oklahoma Kansas Maryland Delaware Rhode Island Connecticut New Jersey Massachusetts New Hampshire Vermont New York Maine Pennslyvania West Virginia Virginia North Carolina South Carolina Georgia Florida Alabama Minnesota Iowa Missouri Arkansas Louisianna Mississippi Tennessee Kentucky Illinois Indiana Ohio Wisconsin Michigan

Medicare Search

Medicare Disclaimer

This website is a private website and is not associated, endorsed or authorized by the Social Security Administration, the Department of Health and Human Services or the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. This site contains basic information about Medicare, services related to Medicare and services for people with Medicare. If you would like to find more information about the Federal Government's Medicare program, please visit the official U.S. Government's Site for people with Medicare located at www.medicare.gov.

Copyright © 2011
Medicare Information Source


Privacy PolicyTerms of Use

Medicare Information Source is a BBB Accredited Business. Click for the BBB Business Review of this Insurance - Medicare Services in Birmingham AL
Alabama Medicare
Alaska Medicare
American Somoa
Arizona Medicare
Arkansas Medicare
California Medicare
Colorado Medicare
Connecticut Medicare
Delaware Medicare
Florida Medicare
Georgia Medicare
Hawaii Medicare
Idaho Medicare
Illinois Medicare
Indiana Medicare
Iowa Medicare
Kansas Medicare
Kentucky Medicare
Louisiana Medicare
Maine Medicare
Maryland Medicare
Massachusetts Medicare
Michigan Medicare
Minnesota Medicare
Mississippi Medicare
Missouri Medicare
Montana Medicare
Nebraska Medicare
Nevada Medicare
New Hampshire Medicare
New Jersey Medicare
New Mexico Medicare
New York Medicare
North Carolina Medicare
North Dakota Medicare
Northern Mariana Island
Ohio Medicare
Oklahoma Medicare
Oregon Medicare
Pennsylvania Medicare
Puerto Rico Medicare
Rhode Island Medicare
South Carolina Medicare
South Dakota Medicare


Tennessee Medicare
Texas Medicare
Utah Medicare
Vermont Medicare
Virgin Islands Medicare
Virginia Medicare
Washington D.C. Medicare
Washington Medicare
West Viginia Medicare
Wisconsin Medicare
Wyoming Medicare