Handling
the Unexpected: Disability
Humans are amazingly adaptive. But sometimes
it takes a long time to recover
from unexpected circumstances. Car crashes. Heart
attacks. Random
acts of violence. Back injuries.
Cancer. These can have long lasting impacts on
our ability
to perform our jobs and earn
money.
Your employer may offer sick time and
a few weeks of short-term
disability. But what if you
still can't work after that? Half of
all mortgage foreclosures are
the result of long-term injuries or
illness.
You can protect yourself
from the financial effects
of these situations with
long-term disability insurance.
Most people have car insurance,
yet 60% of working adults
in this country don't have coverage
to protect their most valuable
asset - the ability to earn
a living.
Are you covered?
Check with your employer, you
may already have long-term
disability coverage. Many employees do and
don't even know it. If
you do, make sure you know
how well you're covered. You don't want to
wait until you really
need the benefits to discover
gaps in the coverage.
Does your benefit calculation
include Social Security payments?
Your policy may assume you
will get Social Security disability
payments in determining how
much to pay out in case of
a claim. But Social Security
will only pay benefits if your disability
will last more than 12 months
or lead to death. There is
a waiting period of five months before
you qualify, and then another
month before you receive benefits.
So even if you have short-term
disability coverage for the
first 12 weeks, there will
be several months of potential unpaid
time.
Social Security disability
covers you only if you are
unable to perform ANY job,
not just your current job.
So even if you are used to
sitting behind a computer or talking on
the phone all day, the government
will expect you to take any
job you can get. Think of
some of the jobs out there
you might be expected to take!
They may be much more physically demanding
or lower paying that what you
are accustomed to.
Your policy
Policies vary considerably
from one to another. Make sure
you know how well you are covered
so that you can prepare around
your policy. If your benefits
are not great, you should save
up more in your emergency fund.
Benefit Amount
Disability insurance pays
only 60% of your current income.
It's designed to be enough
to cover your base expenses
without offering incentive
for people to abuse the
system. If your employer pays your premiums
as an employee benefit, the
disability payments you
receive will be taxable.
If you pay your own premiums,
your disability payments
will be tax-free.
Term of Benefits
Check for how long your benefits
will be paid. Some policies
will cover you for only two
years. Others provide lifelong
benefits. Most policies are
somewhere in between. You
can lower your premiums
by reducing the term of your benefits.
Premium
The amount you (or your employer)
will pay for your coverage
depends on so many variables
that it's impossible to list
them all here. But some of
the main factors are your
age, your gender (on average,
women live longer - longer
benefit payments mean higher premiums), your
job (how dangerous is it?),
your
income (how much will they
have to pay out?), your medical
history and your lifestyle.
Non-cancelable
If your policy is non-cancelable,
you're in luck. Once you
have been approved, they
can't cancel your policy
or raise your rates unless
they stop covering your entire job class.
Guaranteed Renewable
Not quite as good as non-cancelable,
they can't cancel your policy
(again, unless they stop
covering your entire job
class), but they can raise
your rates.
Own Occupation
This is an important designation
on your policy that determines
what it means to be disabled. "Own occupation" means
that you're disabled when
you're unable to perform your current job. "Any
occupation" means
that you're disabled when
you can't perform any job. Obviously "own
occupation" is
preferable but it's also
more expensive.
Elimination
Period
The elimination period
is how long you'll wait
after you are disabled to start
receiving benefits. All
policies have at least
a 30 day waiting period before they start
paying you benefits. Otherwise,
if you missed one
day from work, they would
have to pay you for that
day. But
other policies will wait
even longer to start paying
- 60, 90 or even 120 days.
The longer the elimination
period, the lower the premium.
To determine how long an
elimination period you
should get, figure
out how long you could
go without
earning income. If you've
saved up three months of
expenses, take a 60-day
elimination period (Benefits won't
start until after you've
been disabled for a month. Add a 60-day
elimination period and
you're at three months.) If you have a
claim, file it as soon
as possible. That will start the elimination
period and start your benefits
faster.
Residual Benefits
Some policies will offer
lower amounts for less
than complete disability.
The wording of the policy can
sound very morbid - 20%
for loss of an eye, 40%
for loss of a limb and an eye, etc.
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