Disability Insurance: The Coverage Most People Overlook
Most working Americans spend more time thinking about life insurance than disability insurance, but the data suggests this is backwards. You are 3.5× more likely to become disabled than to die during your working years. A 35-year-old has a 50% chance of experiencing at least one disability lasting 90 days or more before retirement. Yet only 40% of private-sector workers have any long-term disability coverage.
How Much Coverage Do You Need?
The standard recommendation is 60–70% of gross income. This seems conservative until you realize that disability benefits from an individual policy are tax-free (since you paid premiums with after-tax dollars). A $60,000 annual benefit tax-free is equivalent to roughly $75,000–$80,000 in taxable salary for most workers. The goal is to maintain your lifestyle without draining savings.
The Elimination Period Decision
The elimination period is the single biggest lever for reducing premiums. Going from a 30-day to a 90-day elimination period can reduce premiums by 30–40%. The 90-day sweet spot works well if you have 3 months of emergency fund — which most financial planners recommend anyway. Choosing 180 days reduces premiums further but requires 6 months of living expenses in cash reserves.
Group vs. Individual Policies
Employer-sponsored group disability insurance is valuable but has critical limitations. First, it's not portable — if you leave your job, you lose coverage. Second, benefits are typically taxable because premiums are paid pre-tax by the employer. Third, most group policies use "any occupation" definitions after 2 years, meaning you only collect if you can't do ANY work, not just your specific profession. Individual policies, while more expensive, offer portability, tax-free benefits, and "own occupation" definitions that provide superior protection for high-skill professionals.
The SSDI Gap
Many workers assume Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) will cover them. The reality is harsh: over 60% of initial applications are denied, and even approved claims typically take 2+ years from application to first payment. The average SSDI benefit was approximately $1,483/month in 2024 — far below most workers' income replacement needs. Private disability insurance fills the gap between SSDI approval timelines and actual benefit adequacy.