You’re paying off a mortgage in a 6.8% interest world. Your kid’s private school tuition just went up another 4%. And last month, you saw a colleague—healthy, fit, no warning signs—get sidelined by long COVID for eight months.
What happened to him? He burned through savings, borrowed from his 401(k), and still fell behind. His employer‑provided disability plan? It paid. But it wasn’t enough.
Let me show you exactly why relying on that group policy might be the quietest financial risk you’re taking right now.
The “Free” Coverage That Isn’t Free
Group disability insurance feels like a win. Your employer pays the premium—or you pay a small amount pre‑tax. You see the deduction on your pay stub and move on.
Here is where things get tricky.
Most group policies cap your benefit at 60% of base salary. Sounds okay until you run the numbers. A surgeon making $300,000 gets $180,000 annually from the group plan. But that money is taxable when the employer paid the premium. So after federal and state taxes (say 30% combined), you’re actually keeping about $126,000.

Meanwhile, your expenses haven’t dropped. Mortgage: $48,000/year. Private school: $35,000. Car payments, groceries, health insurance deductibles. You do the math. That $126,000 disappears fast.
Now imagine you had bought your own individual disability policy with after‑tax dollars. The benefit is tax‑free. Same 60% of income—$180,000—but you keep every dollar. That’s an extra $54,000 per year in your pocket. Enough to keep paying tuition and still save something.
The Own‑Occupation Trap You Haven’t Thought About
Group policies love the phrase “any occupation.” Read the fine print. After two years, they can stop paying if you’re capable of working any job—even at half your prior income.
Example: You’re a hand surgeon who develops tremors. Surgery is over. But you could teach anatomy at a community college for $70,000. Your group policy says, “Great, you’re employed—no more checks.”
An individual own‑occupation policy works differently. As long as you aren’t working as a hand surgeon (even if you take that teaching job), you still get the full monthly benefit. That’s not a technicality. That’s the difference between staying afloat
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