Disability insurance is the most overlooked policy in most people's coverage stack. The reasoning is implicit — death is dramatic, disability feels distant — but actuarially, a 35-year-old is meaningfully more likely to be disabled for 90+ days before age 65 than to die in the same period.
Here's how to actually evaluate disability coverage in 2026.
What changed in 2026
- Long-term disability rates softening modestly as carriers update mortality and morbidity tables. Premium for healthy 35-year-olds is at multi-year lows.
- Group LTD plans tightening definition language — many employer-sponsored plans use "any occupation" definitions that are harder to claim under than "own occupation."
- Mental health and stress-related claims continue to grow as a share of LTD claims, with carriers tightening underwriting accordingly.
The basic types
Short-term disability (STD)
- Covers 0–6 months of disability
- Typical benefit: 60–70% of pre-disability income
- Often employer-provided as group benefit
- Bridge coverage during the elimination period before LTD kicks in
Long-term disability (LTD)
- Covers from end of STD (typically 90–180 days) to age 65 or 67
- Typical benefit: 50–66% of pre-disability income
- Group LTD via employer is common; individual LTD is purchased separately
- The financially material policy
Social Security Disability (SSDI)
- Federal program for the truly disabled
- Strict definition: cannot do "any substantial gainful activity"
- Approval rate < 40% on initial application; appeals process can take 12–24 months
- Maximum benefit ~$3,800/month in 2026 — usually insufficient as sole income
The "own occupation" vs "any occupation" distinction
This is the most important policy detail.
- Own occupation: You're "disabled" if you can't perform the specific duties of your current occupation. A surgeon who can't operate due to hand tremor remains disabled, even if she could work as a medical school professor.
- Any occupation: You're "disabled" only if you can't perform any work for which you're reasonably qualified. The same surgeon would not be considered disabled if she could teach.
For specialized high earners (doctors, dentists, lawyers, surgeons, traders), own-occupation matters enormously. The premium difference (typically 30–50% higher) is usually worth it.
Group LTD via employer often defines disability as "own occupation" for the first 24 months and "any occupation" thereafter. Individual policies can keep "own occupation" for the entire benefit period.
How much coverage to get
Generally aim for 60–70% of gross income, replaceable.
For a $150k earner:
- Target benefit: $90k–$105k/year ($7,500–$8,750/month)
- If employer LTD provides $5,000/month, supplement individual with $2,500–$3,750/month
Tax considerations:
- Premiums paid by employer → benefits taxable
- Premiums paid by you with after-tax dollars → benefits tax-free
- Many high-earners structure LTD as employee-paid for tax-free benefit
Self-employed and freelancer considerations
If you're self-employed, no employer LTD. You're entirely responsible for buying it yourself. Recommended:
- Build a 6–12 month emergency fund (covers STD-equivalent gap)
- Buy individual LTD with own-occupation definition and 90-day elimination period
- Match benefit to ~65% of pre-disability income
- Coverage period to age 65 or 67
Premium for healthy 35-year-old self-employed earner targeting $5,000/month benefit: typically $150–$300/month.
Mental health and substance abuse caveats
Many policies limit mental/nervous and substance-abuse claims to 24 months total benefit, even if you have a much longer benefit period. Read the fine print — these limits may apply more often than you'd expect given current mental-health-claim trends.
Comparison: disability insurance options
| Source |
Definition |
Coverage period |
Tax on benefits |
| Employer STD |
Varies |
Up to 6 mo |
Taxable if employer-paid |
| Employer LTD |
Often any occ after 24 mo |
To age 65/67 |
Taxable if employer-paid |
| Individual LTD |
Own occupation possible |
To age 65/67 |
Tax-free if you-paid |
| SSDI |
Strict |
Until retirement age |
Taxable above thresholds |
What to actually do
- Verify employer STD/LTD details — definition, benefit amount, coverage period, elimination
- Calculate replacement gap — what percentage of income is covered between employer + savings
- Buy individual LTD to fill the gap, especially if specialized profession
- Read the policy — definition of disability, mental/substance limits, recurrence provisions
What to skip
- Mortgage disability insurance sold by lenders — overpriced and limited; better to buy actual LTD
- AD&D-only policies — Accidental Death & Dismemberment doesn't cover the most common disability causes (illness, mental health)
- Critical illness as substitute — pays only on specific diagnoses; not the same as inability to work
FAQ
Will I get SSDI if I'm disabled?
Maybe, eventually. Average wait time is 12+ months, often with denied initial claims requiring appeals. Don't rely on SSDI as the only plan.
Should young people buy disability insurance?
Younger = cheaper (lower morbidity rates). For high-earning specialists buying their own coverage, locking in low rates by mid-30s is usually worth it.
Are policies portable if I leave my employer?
Group LTD usually isn't (or is at much higher rates). Individual LTD travels with you. Another argument for a privately-purchased supplement.
Where to go next
For related guides see Term vs whole life insurance for 2026, How much term insurance you need in 2026, and Best health insurance marketplace for 2026.