Disability Insurance, Pregnancy, and Maternity Leave
Disability insurance and pregnancy is one of the most commonly misunderstood topics in physician income protection. The short version: most individual DI policies don't cover routine pregnancy or normal childbirth (those are typically handled by short-term disability or maternity leave benefits), but they DO cover pregnancy complications that result in disability, and they cover postpartum conditions including postpartum depression. The single most important strategic insight: buy disability insurance before pregnancy if possible, because conditions during pregnancy can affect future underwriting.
The Short Version
How DI Policies Handle Normal Pregnancy
Standard individual disability insurance policies explicitly exclude normal pregnancy, normal childbirth, and routine postpartum recovery from coverage. The rationale: these are predictable, common, time-limited events that don't fit the actuarial profile of "long-term disability." For most physicians, this isn't a coverage gap — short-term disability benefits (often available through employer-sponsored plans) typically cover the 6–8 weeks of normal maternity leave, and individual DI policies aren't designed to substitute for that. The exclusion typically reads something like: "Disability does not include normal pregnancy or childbirth." Some carriers exclude pregnancy entirely for a defined period (e.g., 10 months); others apply the exclusion specifically to "routine" pregnancy and explicitly carve out complications.What's Covered: Complications and Postpartum
Pregnancy complications that cause disability — meaning they impair your ability to do your job — are typically covered under most individual DI policies:- Hyperemesis gravidarum (severe nausea and vomiting requiring bed rest)
- Preeclampsia requiring extended bed rest or hospitalization
- Placental complications
- Premature labor requiring bed rest
- Surgical complications from C-section
- Postpartum hemorrhage with extended recovery
- Postpartum depression (covered as a mental/nervous condition under standard policy terms)
- Other postpartum conditions that delay return to work beyond normal maternity period
Why Timing Matters: Buy DI Before Pregnancy
The most important practical insight for physicians considering pregnancy: buy individual disability insurance before pregnancy if at all possible. Reasons:- Pregnancy complications affect future underwriting. A history of preeclampsia, hyperemesis, or postpartum depression can result in exclusions, rated premiums, or declines for future applications.
- Active pregnancy can delay underwriting. Some carriers postpone underwriting decisions during pregnancy, waiting until 6–12 weeks postpartum before issuing a policy.
- Insurability locks in. Once a policy is issued, your insurability is established. Subsequent pregnancy events can't affect that policy — they may affect future applications, but not coverage already in place.
Group LTD and Short-Term Disability
Most hospital systems and large physician group practices offer short-term disability (STD) coverage that handles the 6–12 weeks of normal maternity leave, plus group LTD that picks up at 90+ days if recovery is prolonged. For pregnancy specifically:- Short-term disability typically covers 60–100% of base salary for 6–12 weeks of normal maternity leave
- FMLA / state PFL provide job-protected leave with varying income replacement
- Group LTD applies after 90 days if disability continues — covering complications or PPD
- Individual DI applies after the policy elimination period (typically 90 days) for complications or postpartum conditions
Frequently Asked Questions
If I'm planning a pregnancy, should I wait to buy DI?
Does the residual disability rider apply to pregnancy complications?
What about postpartum return-to-work? Does DI cover gradual return?
I had preeclampsia in my first pregnancy. Will that affect my DI application?
Have a Question About Your Specific Situation?
Disability insurance underwriting depends on your specific facts. We work with physicians one-on-one to identify the right carrier and policy structure for your situation. Call us at 1-888-972-0024 or request a quote.
Further reading & authoritative sources
- NAIC: Disability Insurance — regulatory framework
- Council for Disability Awareness — disability statistics and risk data
- American Medical Association — physician practice resources
