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Income Protection

Disability Insurance Calculator

Calculate how much disability insurance coverage you need based on your income, existing employer benefits, and target income replacement percentage.

Estimate Your Coverage Gap

Most insurers cap individual policies at 60-70% of income.

Why Disability Insurance Matters

A serious illness or injury is statistically far more likely to interrupt your income before retirement than death is — yet most workers carry life insurance and skip disability coverage entirely. Disability insurance replaces a portion of your income if you become unable to work.

How This Calculator Works

Insurers typically cap individual disability policies at 60-70% of gross income (to preserve the incentive to return to work). This tool multiplies your gross monthly income by your target replacement percentage, then subtracts any group/employer coverage you already have to show the remaining gap an individual policy should fill. It also estimates the savings you'd need on hand to bridge the "elimination period" — the waiting window before benefit payments begin.

Estimate only. Actual underwriting, benefit caps, and elimination periods vary by insurer, occupation class, and state. Consult a licensed disability insurance broker for an accurate quote.

Frequently Asked Questions

What percentage of income does disability insurance replace?

Most individual and group long-term disability policies replace 60-70% of gross income, since benefits are often received tax-free (for individually-paid premiums) and insurers want to preserve a financial incentive to return to work.

What is an elimination period?

The elimination period is the waiting time (commonly 30, 60, or 90 days) between the start of a disability and when benefit payments begin. A longer elimination period generally lowers your premium but requires more emergency savings to bridge the gap.

Does my employer's group disability policy cover enough?

Often not fully — many group policies replace only 50-60% of base salary and may exclude bonuses or commissions, plus benefits are usually taxable if your employer paid the premiums. An individual supplemental policy can close that gap.