Principal vs. Ameritas Disability Insurance: Which Is Better for Physicians?
Principal and Ameritas are both mid-tier carriers that frequently come up in physician disability insurance quote comparisons — often as the #1 and #2 best offers by price. They're both strong on true own-occupation coverage at competitive pricing, and the decision between them often comes down to career stage (Principal wins for residents and fellows) and specialty (Ameritas often edges out for attending non-surgical specialists). Here's how to think about choosing.
Side-by-Side Comparison: Principal vs. Ameritas
When to Choose Principal
Choose Principal if any of the following apply:- You're a resident or fellow. Principal is consistently the most competitively priced carrier for younger physicians and offers strong future-increase optionality.
- You have significant student loans. Principal's student loan rider is the most generous on the market — up to $5,000/month of dedicated loan coverage for 10–15 years during a disability claim.
- You're an early-career attending (first 2–3 years out of training) where Principal's pricing advantage is still material.
- You're in family medicine, internal medicine, or primary care at any career stage. Principal's pricing tier consistently works for these specialties.
- You're GSI-eligible at an institution offering Principal as the GSI carrier (some programs use Principal; others use Guardian or MassMutual).
When to Choose Ameritas
Choose Ameritas if any of the following apply:- You're an established attending (5+ years out of training) where Ameritas's pricing edge over Principal often emerges.
- You're a non-surgical specialist — dermatologist (cognitive), endocrinologist, rheumatologist, neurologist — where Ameritas's positioning is particularly strong.
- Your student loans are already paid off or close to it, removing Principal's loan rider advantage.
- You want a second carrier option on a multi-carrier stack (e.g., Guardian + Ameritas combination for higher total benefit).
- You're in your 40s or 50s where Ameritas's pricing is often more competitive than Principal's on a like-for-like comparison.
Specialty-Specific Considerations
For residents and fellows, Principal almost always wins on price and on the student loan rider — these are typically the two most important factors at training stage. For attending non-surgical specialists, the comparison flips: Ameritas frequently quotes 10–15% lower than Principal for the same coverage at attending stage. The transition point is usually around the 2–3 year mark out of training, when income stabilizes and the student loan rider is less critical. For specialty mix — family medicine and IM see both carriers as competitive; dermatology, endocrinology, and rheumatology often see Ameritas edge ahead.Pricing Dynamics: How They Compare in Practice
Principal and Ameritas are usually closer in price than either is to Guardian or MassMutual. For a 30-year-old resident: Principal might quote $180/month vs. Ameritas at $220/month. For the same person at age 35 as an attending: Principal might quote $380/month vs. Ameritas at $340/month. The pricing curves cross somewhere around age 33–35 for most specialties, reflecting different actuarial assumptions about applicant maturity. This is why we sometimes recommend Principal initially for residents and a switch to Ameritas at attending stage — but with the caveat that switching carriers loses your existing insurability lock-in, so the math has to work out.Frequently Asked Questions
Should I start with Principal in residency and switch to Ameritas later?
What's the maximum total benefit possible with Principal + Ameritas stacking?
Does Ameritas have a strong claim-paying reputation?
Can I get both Principal and Ameritas as a resident?
Get Principal and Ameritas Quotes Side-by-Side
We'll pull actual offers from both carriers — plus the three other major carriers — and walk you through which one fits your situation best. Call us at 1-888-972-0024 or request a quote.
Further reading & authoritative sources
- A.M. Best ratings — financial strength ratings for insurance carriers
- NAIC: Disability Insurance — regulatory framework
