Disability Insurance
What are the types of disability insurance?
There are two types of disability policies: Short-Term Disability (STD) and Long-Term Disability (LTD):
- Short-Term Disability policies (STD) have a waiting period of 0 to 14 days with a maximum benefit period of no longer than two years.
- Long-Term Disability policies (LTD) have a waiting period of several weeks to several months with a maximum benefit period ranging
from a few years to the rest of your life.
Disability policies have two different protection features that are important to understand.
- Noncancelable means the policy cannot be canceled by the insurance company, except for nonpayment of premiums. This gives you the
right to renew the policy every year without an increase in the premium or a reduction in benefits.
- Guaranteed renewable gives you the right to renew the policy with the same benefits and not have the policy canceled by the company.
However, your insurer has the right to increase your premiums as long as it does so for all other policyholders in the same rating class as you.
In addition to the traditional disability policies, there are several options you should consider when purchasing a policy:
- Additional purchase options
Your insurance company gives you the right to buy additional insurance
at a later time.
- Coordination of benefits
The amount of benefits you receive from your insurance company is
dependent on other benefits you receive because of your disability. Your
policy specifies a target amount you will receive from all the policies
combined, so this policy will make up the difference not paid by other
policies.
- Cost of living adjustment (COLA)
The COLA increases your disability benefits over time based on the
increased cost of living measured by the Consumer Price Index. You will
pay a higher premium if you select the COLA.
- Residual or partial disability rider
This provision allows you to return to work part-time, collect part of
your salary and receive a partial disability payment if you are still
partially disabled.
- Return of premium
This provision requires the insurance company to refund part of your
premium if no claims are made for a specific period of time declared in
the policy.
- Waiver of premium provision
This clause means that you do not have to pay premiums on the policy
after you’re disabled for 90 days.
Will my employer provide disability coverage?
Most employers offer some kind of disability insurance, but you should find
out exactly what your employer offers before you have to file a claim. Most
allow some short-term sick leave, which might last from a few days to as
much as six months. In some states, such as Hawaii, New Jersey, New York and
Rhode Island, state law requires employers to provide disability benefits
for up to 26 weeks.
Check with your benefits department to see if you are covered and if so, how
long you must wait before benefits begin and how long payments will last
while you are still disabled. Also, ask if your employer’s disability plan
takes other disability programs, such as Social Security, into account when
calculating your disability pay.
No laws require employers to offer long-term disability (LTD) coverage, but
about half of large and mid-sized employers offer it to their workers.
Typical group long-term disability benefits replace about 60 percent of the
worker’s usual salary. These benefits usually start when short-term benefits
are exhausted and continue from five years to life. Usually, group long-term
disability insurance is fully paid for by employers, with no contribution
expected from employees. When you receive employer-paid disability income,
you must pay federal and state income tax on the benefits, unless your
company pays it for you.
Source: Insurance Information Institute, www.iii.org.