You just paid off your mortgage last year.
Your kid’s private school tuition? Locked in for another three years.
Then you tweak your back. Not paralyzed. Not bedridden. Just a herniated disc that says “no more 10-hour surgery shifts.”
You can still work. Just not your specialty.
That’s partial disability.
And here’s where 90% of doctors and business owners get wiped out: they think their policy pays if they can’t do their job.
It doesn’t.
Not unless you bought the right contract.
1. The “any occupation” trap
Most group plans – the one your employer gives you – use a two-step test.
First 24 months: own occupation.
After that? “Any occupation.”
Meaning? You can’t do spine surgery anymore, but you can answer phones at a clinic. Insurance says you’re “employed.” Payout stops.
Partial disability gets even murkier.
You lose 40% of your income because you’re doing lighter work. The policy calculates your benefit as a percentage of that loss. But only if the loss exceeds 20%. And only if you’re not doing “any gainful work.”
See the loophole?
If you earn $15,000/month as a surgeon, drop to $9,000 after injury – that’s a 40% hit. A good partial disability rider pays you 40% of your benefit.
But most carriers require a minimum 20% income loss and a change in duties.
Change in duties.
That’s the knife.
You start teaching at a med school. Same paycheck? No payout. Even if you hate it. Even if you lost your career.
2. Own-occupation vs. modified own-occupation – the partial twist
True own-occupation: you can’t do your specific job. Doesn’t matter what else you do.
Modified own-occupation: you can’t do your job and you’re not working in another medical field.
For partial disability, only two carriers in the U.S. get it right – Guardian (Berkshire) and Principal.
Here is why:
Guardian’s partial rider pays if your income drops by 20% or more, regardless of what you switch to. You lose 30% of income,they chip in 30% of your monthly benefit. No “work in another occupation” disqualification.
Principal is similar but uses a 15% loss trigger. Slightly lower bar.
MassMutual? Their partial benefit requires you to be totally disabled first. Yes – you have to be fully out of work for 30 days before the partial rider kicks in.
Most agents don’t explain this because they don’t know. They just sell the cheapest quote.
3. The tax landmine
You pay your own premiums with post-tax dollars? Benefit comes in tax-free.
Your employer pays? Uncle Sam takes a cut.

Group disability premiums are usually paid by the company. So when you get that $6,000/month check for partial loss, you’re actually keeping about $4,200 after federal and state taxes.
Now run the numbers.
Your mortgage: $4,500.
Private school: $2,000.
Car lease, insurance, groceries: $2,500.
You’re negative $800 before you even buy gas.
That’s why high earners buy individual policies even if they have group coverage. Not because they’re paranoid. Because they’ve seen colleagues lose their houses.
4. What happens when inflation hits 3.8% (again)
Your 60% benefit from a partial claim is based on your pre-disability income.
Pre-disability means at the time of claim, not at purchase.
So if you bought your policy in 2021 with a $10,000 monthly benefit, and inflation ate 15% of your purchasing power by 2026 – that $10,000 is really $8,500 in 2021 dollars.
Now apply a 40% partial loss.
You get $4,000/month instead of $6,000.
In 2021 dollars, that’s $3,400.
Can you live on $3,400?
Most surgeons can’t cover their student loan payment with that.
5. Two mistakes you’re making right now
Mistake #1: “I’ll just rely on my employer’s short-term disability.”
STD pays for 90 days at best. Partial disability often lasts 18 months. And group STD doesn’t cover partial loss after you return to work.
Mistake #2: “I don’t need a partial rider because I’ll be totally disabled or nothing.”
Data from the Council for Disability Awareness: over 60% of claims start as partial disability. Back injuries. Early-stage MS. Long COVID with cognitive fog.
You won’t be in a wheelchair. You’ll just be slow.
And slow doesn’t pay.
What to do before your next physical
Call your carrier and ask three questions:
1. Is my partial disability benefit based on income loss alone, or does it require a change in duties?
2. What’s the minimum income loss percentage to trigger a payment?
3. If I switch to a different occupation that pays the same, do I lose coverage?
If the answer to #3 is “yes,” you own the wrong policy.
Get an in-force illustration. Add a partial disability rider with a 15-20% trigger and no “other occupation” clause. It’ll cost you 8-12% more in premium.
That’s about $600/year on a $5,000 monthly benefit.
Or the cost of one night out in Manhattan.
Your call.
Leave a Reply