Disability Income Insurance

Imagine a specialized piece of machinery sitting in a client’s garage. Every year, it reliably prints out $100,000 in crisp bills to pay their mortgage, buy their groceries, and fund their children's education. If that machine began to sputter and break down, your client would spare no expense to insure it. As an insurance producer, your primary job is to help clients realize they are that machine. Their ability to wake up, go to work, and earn a paycheck is their most valuable asset. If an illness or injury destroys that earning capacity, the financial foundation collapses. This is the domain of disability income insurance.

Fundamentally, disability income insurance replaces a portion of an insured's earned income upon the inability to work due to sickness or injury. It is not designed to make a client wealthy; it is designed to keep them solvent. You will notice immediately that insurance companies typically limit disability income benefits to between 50% and 70% of an individual's gross earned income.

Why not 100%? The insurance industry relies on fundamental human psychology. Limiting disability income benefits to a percentage of gross income discourages malingering. Malingering is the act of faking or prolonging a disability to continue collecting insurance benefits. If an individual could make exactly the same amount of money staying home watching television as they could working a grueling 40-hour week, the mathematical incentive to return to work vanishes. The 50% to 70% limit ensures the insured has enough money to survive, but maintains a financial incentive to recover and return to the workforce.

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