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Income Protection

Disability Income Insurance

Coverage Type

Income Replacement

Payout

Monthly Income

A practical guide to protecting your income if illness or injury prevents you from working.

75% Max Income Replacement
Until 65 Benefit Period
30-90 Days Waiting Period
3 Insurers Available in SG

01 / The Foundation

Your income is your most important asset

Everything else - savings, investments, property - depends on your ability to earn.

Your future earning capacity often exceeds the value of all your other assets combined. For most working adults, the ability to show up and earn an income funds every financial goal: paying down a mortgage, building savings, supporting family, and planning for retirement.

Unlike your home or car, your income doesn't have a visible price tag. This makes it easy to overlook - until it stops.

What your income funds

๐Ÿ 
Housing & mortgage payments
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Family expenses & children's education
๐Ÿ’ฐ
Savings & retirement contributions
๐Ÿ›ก๏ธ
Insurance premiums & protection

A simple question: If your income stopped for 6 months, would your financial life continue as planned?

43%

Of 40-year-olds will experience a long-term disability before age 65

53%

Of Singapore workers have no disability income protection

2 in 3

Workers worry about job loss due to illness or disability

02 / The Reality

What happens financially if income stops

Income stops. Expenses don't.

Income Timeline

Working

Regular income flows in

โœ“ Bills paid on time
โœ“ Savings growing
โœ“ Plans on track

Unable to Work

Income stops, expenses continue

! Savings depleted
! Bills become stressful
! Plans derailed

Recovery or Adaptation

Return to work or adjust

โ†’ Full recovery
โ†’ Reduced capacity
โ†’ Career change

Expenses that continue during disability

These don't pause when you can't work

Mortgage / Rent
Utilities & Bills
Food & Groceries
Insurance Premiums
Children's Expenses
Loan Repayments

The gap: These expenses require income, but there's no income coming in.

Most people focus on medical bills. But the bigger challenge is often the loss of income while recovering - which can last months or years.

03 / How It Works

What Disability Income Insurance covers

Monthly income replacement when you cannot perform your occupation.

1

You become disabled

Unable to work in your occupation

2

Waiting period

Typically 30-90 days

3

Monthly payouts begin

Up to 75% of your income

4

Continues until

Recovery or age 65

Coverage includes

  • - Own occupation disability for the first 24 months
  • - Temporary disabilities until you recover
  • - Partial disability benefits if you return at reduced capacity
  • - Mental health conditions (varies by policy)
  • - Premium waiver during the claim period

Key terms explained

Own Occupation

You receive benefits if you can't perform your specific job, even if you could do other work.

Deferred Period

The waiting time before benefits begin. Longer periods typically mean lower premiums.

Benefit Period

How long payouts continue if you remain disabled - often until age 60 or 65.

Real-World Scenarios

๐Ÿ‘จโ€๐Ÿซ

John, School Teacher

$5,000/month | Age 30

John was seriously injured in a car accident and couldn't work for over a year. His spine injuries later required him to switch to an office role with a 40% pay cut.

DII Monthly Benefit: $3,750/month
Partial Disability Top-up: $1,500/month
Total Coverage Period: Until recovery or age 65
๐Ÿฆท

Dr. Lim, Dentist

$15,000/month | Age 35

Dr. Lim developed severe carpal tunnel syndrome. While not "permanently disabled," she can no longer perform dental procedures - her own occupation.

TPD Claim? Not eligible
CareShield Life? Not eligible
DII Claim: Eligible (own occupation)

How to Make a Claim

1

Notify Insurer

Within 6 months of disability

2

Submit Documents

Medical reports, proof of income

3

Wait Deferred Period

Typically 30-90 days

4

Receive Benefits

Monthly payouts begin

Required Documents: Claim form, Attending Physician's Statement, medical reports, payslips (12 months prior), employer letter confirming leave/inability to work.

04 / Important Exclusions

What Disability Income Insurance does not cover

Understanding the boundaries helps you plan your overall protection.

Not covered by Disability Income

  • โœ— Hospitalisation or medical bills
  • โœ— Critical illness treatment costs
  • โœ— Death benefits
  • โœ— Long-term care costs
  • โœ— Disability while unemployed
  • โœ— Self-inflicted injuries

These require separate coverage

  • โ†’ Hospital plan for medical expenses
  • โ†’ Critical Illness for lump sum treatment costs
  • โ†’ Term/Whole Life for death and TPD protection
  • โ†’ CareShield Life for severe long-term disability

Each type of coverage addresses a different risk. They work together, not as alternatives.

Key point: Disability Income Insurance focuses specifically on replacing your monthly income. Other insurance types handle medical costs, lump sum needs, and long-term care.

05 / Understanding the Differences

How different protections work together

Three types of coverage, three different purposes.

๐Ÿฅ

Hospital Plans

Pays for medical treatment

Covers: Hospital bills, surgery, treatments

Payout: Reimburses actual costs

Purpose: Get treatment without financial worry

๐Ÿ’Š

Critical Illness

Lump sum upon diagnosis

Covers: 37+ serious conditions

Payout: One-time lump sum

Purpose: Treatment costs, lifestyle adjustments

๐Ÿ’ฐ

Disability Income

Monthly income replacement

Covers: Inability to work

Payout: Monthly (like salary)

Purpose: Pay bills while recovering

Example: Cancer diagnosis requiring 18 months off work

Hospital Plan

Covers treatment bills

Critical Illness

Lump sum for expenses & adjustments

Disability Income

Monthly income for 18 months of recovery

All three work together. None alone provides complete protection.

Disability Income vs TPD vs CareShield Life

Three different coverages for three different needs - they are not alternatives

Disability Income

Income Replacement

Payout Type

Monthly (like salary)

Trigger

Unable to perform own occupation

Duration

Until recovery or age 65

Covers

Temporary & Permanent

Amount

Up to 75% of salary

Best for: Working adults who need income replacement

TPD (from Life/Term)

Lump Sum Protection

Payout Type

One-time lump sum

Trigger

Total & Permanent disability

Duration

One-time payment only

Covers

Permanent only (very strict)

Amount

Usually = Death benefit

Best for: Settling debts immediately

CareShield Life

Long-Term Care

Payout Type

Monthly (for care needs)

Trigger

Fail 3 of 6 ADLs

Duration

Lifetime

Covers

Severe disability only

Amount

$600+/month (MediSave payable)

Best for: Long-term care expenses

Feature Disability Income TPD (Life/Term Rider) CareShield Life
Purpose Replace lost income Settle debts immediately Cover long-term care costs
Payout Structure Monthly (salary-like) One-time lump sum Monthly (fixed amount)
Benefit Amount Up to 75% of salary Equals death benefit $600+/month (2026)
Disability Definition Own occupation (24mo)
Then any suited occupation
Very strict:
Lose 2 limbs or fail 3 ADLs permanently
Fail 3 of 6 ADLs
(Severe disability)
Temporary Disability โœ“ Covered โœ— Not covered โœ— Not covered
Partial Disability โœ“ Proportional payout โœ— All or nothing โœ— No partial benefit
Payout Duration Until recovery or age 65 One-time only Lifetime
Mental Health Coverage โœ“ Some plans Usually excluded Depends on ADLs

The Coverage Gap Without Disability Income Insurance

Less Severe More Severe
DII
Temporary to Permanent
TPD
Permanent Only
CareShield
Severe Only

Without DII: You have a major gap for temporary disabilities, partial disabilities, and "own occupation" disabilities that don't meet strict TPD or CareShield criteria.

Key Takeaway

TPD and CareShield Life are NOT substitutes for Disability Income Insurance. They cover different scenarios and should be considered complementary, not alternative coverages.

06 / Planning Considerations

How much coverage is appropriate

The right amount depends on your circumstances, not a formula.

Factors to consider

  • 1 Fixed monthly commitments - mortgage, loans, regular bills that must be paid regardless
  • 2 Dependents - family members who rely on your income for their needs
  • 3 Emergency savings - how long can you last without income using savings alone?
  • 4 Employer coverage - does your workplace provide any disability benefits?

General guidelines

Most policies allow coverage up to 75% of your monthly income. The remaining 25% accounts for work-related expenses you won't incur while disabled.

Consider what you'd need to maintain your basic standard of living - not your entire current lifestyle.

A financial conversation can help you think through what makes sense for your specific situation.

The goal isn't to replicate your salary exactly. It's to cover essential expenses so you can focus on recovery, not finances.

07 / Clearing Up Confusion

Common misunderstandings

What many people believe vs what actually happens.

Common belief

"My TPD coverage already protects me if I can't work."

Reality

TPD requires permanent disability - losing limbs or failing 3 ADLs. Most disabilities that stop you from working don't qualify.

Common belief

"Disability only happens to people in dangerous jobs."

Reality

Mental health conditions, back problems, and chronic illnesses are common causes - affecting office workers as much as anyone.

Common belief

"My savings can cover a few months off work."

Reality

Many disabilities last 6-24 months or longer. Savings meant for other goals get depleted, setting you back financially even after recovery.

Common belief

"It's too expensive for the risk."

Reality

Premiums typically range from 1-3% of annual income. Compare that to the cost of losing 100% of your income for months.

08 / Worth Knowing

Why this is often overlooked

It's not about awareness - it's about how protection is typically discussed.

Limited availability

Only 3 insurers in Singapore offer standalone Disability Income plans. Many advisors simply aren't familiar with the product.

More nuanced to explain

Death coverage is simple. Critical illness is straightforward. Income protection requires understanding disability definitions and benefit periods.

Confused with other products

Many assume their TPD rider or employer benefits provide similar protection. Often, they don't.

The coverage gap isn't deliberate. It's simply that income protection requires a conversation most people never have. If you're reading this, you're already thinking more carefully than most.

09 / Is It For You?

Who needs Disability Income Insurance?

HIGH PRIORITY Essential For:

๐Ÿ‘จโ€๐Ÿ‘ฉโ€๐Ÿ‘งโ€๐Ÿ‘ฆ

Sole Breadwinners

If your family depends entirely on your income, DII ensures they're protected if you can't work.

๐Ÿฆท

Specialized Professionals

Dentists, surgeons, pilots, musicians - if a specific skill is your livelihood, protect it.

๐Ÿ 

Mortgage Holders

Your mortgage doesn't pause when you're disabled. DII ensures you keep your home.

๐Ÿ’ผ

Self-Employed

No employer benefits? DII is your safety net when you can't earn.

๐Ÿ“Š

High-Income Earners

The higher your income, the greater your potential loss. Protect your lifestyle.

๐Ÿ’ก

No Employer Benefits

If your employer doesn't provide disability coverage, you need your own.

Not Just for "High-Risk" Jobs

A common misconception is that DII is only for construction workers or those in hazardous environments. In reality, office workers are just as vulnerable - mental health conditions, back injuries, and repetitive strain are increasingly common causes of disability.

๐Ÿง 

Mental Health

Depression, anxiety, burnout

๐Ÿ–ฅ๏ธ

Repetitive Strain

Carpal tunnel, back problems

๐Ÿซ€

Medical Conditions

Heart issues, autoimmune disorders

Quick Self-Assessment

1

If you couldn't work for 6 months, could you maintain your current lifestyle?

2

Do you have dependents who rely on your income?

3

Do you have ongoing financial commitments (mortgage, loans, insurance premiums)?

4

Is your ability to work tied to specific skills or physical capabilities?

If you answered no to question 1 and yes to any others, Disability Income Insurance should be a priority.

10 / Available Options

Providers in Singapore

Only 3 insurers offer standalone Disability Income Insurance plans

Feature Provider A Provider B Provider C
Monthly Benefit Up to 75% of income Up to 75% of income Up to 75% of income
Own Occupation Definition Until age 65 First 24 months only First 24 months only
Benefit Period Until age 60 or 65 Up to 10 years or age 65 Up to 10 years or age 65
Deferred Period 30/60/90/180 days 30/60/90/180 days 90 days
Escalating Benefits 3% p.a. option Yes 3% p.a. option
Partial Disability Yes Yes Yes
Premium Waiver During disability During disability During disability

Premium Considerations

Premiums typically range from 1-3% of your annual income, depending on:

Age

Younger = Lower

Occupation

Risk level matters

Benefit Amount

Higher = More premium

Deferred Period

Longer = Lower

Note: Women may pay higher premiums due to historically higher claim rates (pregnancy, autoimmune conditions). Smokers typically pay 25% more than non-smokers.

11 / Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

How is Disability Income Insurance different from my employer's disability coverage?

Employer-provided disability coverage (if any) typically ends when you leave your job, may have lower benefit amounts, and may have stricter definitions of disability. A personal policy stays with you regardless of employment changes, is portable, and you control the terms. Most employer plans also only provide short-term disability coverage (a few months), while personal coverage can protect you until age 65.

Can I claim DII and Critical Illness at the same time?

Yes, if you have both policies and meet the claim criteria for each, you can claim from both. For example, if you're diagnosed with cancer (CI claim) and cannot work (DII claim), you would receive:

โ€ข A lump sum from your Critical Illness policy for treatment costs
โ€ข Monthly payouts from DII to replace your income while you recover

This is why financial planners recommend having both coverages - they serve different purposes.

What if I can work but at a reduced capacity?

Most plans include a Partial Disability Benefit. If you can return to work but earn less due to your disability, the plan will pay the difference proportionally.

Example: If your benefit is $5,000/month and you return to work at 60% capacity (earning 60% of your previous salary), the plan may pay you $2,000/month (40% of the benefit) to bridge the gap. This incentivizes recovery while still protecting your income.

Does DII cover mental health conditions?

This varies by insurer and policy. Some plans do cover mental health conditions like clinical depression, anxiety disorders, or burnout if they prevent you from performing your occupation. However, there may be limitations or waiting periods for mental health claims.

This is actually a significant advantage over Critical Illness (which typically doesn't cover mental health) and TPD (which has very strict requirements). Always check the specific policy wording.

Can I buy DII if I have pre-existing conditions?

You can apply with pre-existing conditions, but the insurer may:

โ€ข Exclude claims related to that condition
โ€ข Charge higher premiums (loading)
โ€ข Decline coverage in severe cases

This is why it's important to secure coverage while you're still healthy. Once you develop a condition, it becomes harder and more expensive to obtain coverage.

Are DII benefits taxable in Singapore?

If you pay for your policy with after-tax dollars (personal funds), the benefits are generally tax-free in Singapore. However, if your employer pays for the premiums and the policy is considered part of your employment benefits, the benefits may be subject to income tax. Consult a tax professional for your specific situation.

I already have TPD coverage. Do I still need DII?

Yes, absolutely. TPD and DII are complementary, not alternatives. Here's why:

TPD only pays if you're totally and permanently disabled (lose 2 limbs, or fail 3 ADLs permanently). This is a very high bar - most disabilities don't meet this criteria.

DII pays if you can't perform your own occupation, even temporarily. A dentist who develops hand tremors, a pilot who loses partial vision, or an office worker with severe back pain would likely NOT qualify for TPD but WOULD qualify for DII.

Think of TPD as catastrophic coverage and DII as income replacement for the more common (but still serious) disabilities.

Protect Your Income Stream

Your income funds everything - mortgage, education, retirement. Let's assess what coverage you need to maintain your lifestyle if illness or injury stops you from working.

No sales pressure. We focus on understanding your needs first.

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