Income Protection
Income Protection
If you get sick or injured and signed off work, an income protection policy will provide you with a regular income. They can pay you 50%-70% of your regular income and be used to pay your mortgage and other monthly expenses.
The income is paid until you are well enough to return to work, you die or the end of the income payment period. Payment periods can vary to fit your needs and budget.
See below some handy tips and information about our income protection cover.
Frequently asked questions
Income Protection provides you with the reassurance that you’ll be able to pay your bills even when you’re not working. Whether you’re injured or suffering from an illness, having income protection will help you through the hard times.
This type of policy can be very helpful if your job won’t cover you for a long period off work and you depend heavily on your salary to support yourself and maybe your family too. Insurance protection will take some of the stress away, so you can concentrate on getting better.
Income Protection provides you with the reassurance that you’ll be able to pay your bills even when you’re not working. Whether you’re injured or suffering from an illness, having income protection will help you through the hard times.
This type of policy can be very helpful if your job won’t cover you for a long period off work and you depend heavily on your salary to support yourself and maybe your family too. Insurance protection will take some of the stress away, so you can concentrate on getting better.
Unlike critical illness cover, income protection doesn’t have a set list of illnesses that are protected by the policy. It offers fully comprehensive insurance when you need it. You just need to be signed off work by a doctor. There’s no one size fits all with income protection, it’s tailored to suit your needs.
This could be linked to how much you’re spending each month or what you’d need to cover essential monthly outgoings. Alternatively, you might like to insure as much as possible.
The maximum level of insurance you can take varies between insurers but is generally between 50% and 70% of your regular income. You don’t need to pay income tax on your payments.
During periods of ill health, it’s possible that your outgoings may increase, so it’s important to set a sensible level of cover. Reasons you may end up spending more each month include:
- Investment in your recovery, for example gym membership or private therapies
- Increased household bills because you’re spending more time at home during your recovery
- Convenient food options, such as food kits or food delivery services, which can be expensive
- Transport to get around if you can no longer walk or drive yourself
- Childcare services if you need extra help looking after little ones.
It depends. There isn’t a set figure that you pay for income protection as there are many factors that influence the cost, including the length of the policy, monthly income, your age, and your current health and medical history.
We’d be happy to go through all of this with you to obtain a no obligation quote and give you a good understanding of what the premium might be.
Income protection policies pay out only once a pre-agreed period has passed. This is generally between 1 and 12 months after you are signed off work by a doctor. This is known as a deferred period. The longer the deferred period you choose, the lower your premiums.
This is not a simple one! There are 3 methods insurers use to assess whether you can work:
1. Activities of daily living
Historically, insurers would assess your ability to carry out ‘activities of daily living’. This included basic tasks like showering, getting dressed, using the toilet, brushing your teeth, walking, climbing stairs and getting in and out of a car. If you were unable to do three of these things, for example, your income protection policy would pay out. These types of policies tend to be cheapest.
2. ‘Suited occupation’ income protection
If an income protection policy is bought on a ‘suited’ basis, this means that your insurer accepts you can’t do your job anymore but may not pay out when you make a claim if it believes you can do something similar to which you are suited.
For example, you may have a senior role managing a team of people, which you can no longer do because of stress. With a suited policy, the insurer might deem that you go down a level, where you’re doing a similar role but no longer managing a team, and therefore refuse to pay out.
A suited policy is preferable to one than one that uses activities of daily living to assess your ability to work, but the type that offers the most protection is an ‘own occupation’ policy (see below).
3. ‘Own occupation’ income protection
‘Own occupation’ income protection policies do what they say on the tin – they pay out if you can’t do the job you currently hold at the point of making a claim.
An insurer will not make an assessment that you could take a different, similar job, and therefore refuse to pay, like a ‘suited occupation’ policy.
This type of income protection provides the highest level of protection should you get ill and be unable to do your job.
There are 2 types of income protection, full cover and short term pay-out, also known as budget cover.
Full cover
Full income protection will pay out from the end of the deferred period until you are well enough to return to work or if that doesn’t happen all the way through until the end of the policy term, which could be more than 40 years. This option offers the maximum amount of protection in the event of a claim
Budget income protection (short-term pay-out)
Budget income protection will pay out from the end of the deferred period until you are well enough to return to work or if that doesn’t happen for a set period, which is normally anywhere between 1 and 5 years. These policies are usually significantly cheaper than a full income protection policy and are provide valuable protection where your budget doesn’t stretch to a full term policy.
Yes, you can. To support a claim, you’ll need to provide evidence of your income, such as your most recent SA302 tax calculation.
Possibly, but your choices might be limited. It’s likely that if cover is available, you’ll need to pay more for your premiums, or the provider may say they won’t pay out if you’re off work because of the condition you have.
It’s important to tell your insurance provider about any medical problems that could affect your claim. If you don’t, they could refuse a pay-out.
Fracture cover
Fracture cover is offered by a few insurance companies and can be bolted onto a critical illness policy at a cost. With this cover, you could receive a lump sum of up to £6,000 (depending on where the fracture is) to help tide you over while you recover.
Second medical opinion
This provides access to a database of consultant specialists throughout the UK, allowing a face-to-face consultation with a supporting report which is sent to both you and your GP. This is useful if you have a critical illness and want a second opinion from an expert.
Support helplines
Some providers also offer helplines for mental health, medical queries, legal advice etc. For example, you could have a nurse on hand to discuss medical concerns, or access to mental health support.
Hospitalisation benefit
Some policies pay you a proportion of your income protection if you go into hospital, even if this is before your deferral period is over.
Waiver of premium
This means you won’t have to pay premiums while you are claiming on your income protection policy.
Payments when you go back to work
Many income protection policies don’t stop paying when you go back to work if your earnings are reduced because of your illness (perhaps because you are working fewer days). Providers will continue paying your income, albeit at a reduced amount, taking into account your reduced earnings. This will end once your earnings recover to the level when you took the policy out.
Other protection we offer
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