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By Jason Goldenzweig · Co-owner, DoctorDisabilityQuotes.com · Last updated: May 12, 2026

Is Disability Insurance Worth It for Physicians?

For nearly every physician, yes. Physicians have more income at stake than almost any other profession, and disability insurance is the only practical way to protect future earnings against the risk of illness or injury. The investment is typically 1–3% of gross income, and it protects an income stream worth $5–15 million over a career. The math is overwhelming. Here's the case for why and the few situations where it might genuinely not be necessary.

Yes for nearly all physicians$200K-$400K average annual premium NPVIncome at stake: millionsNo other product replaces it

The Short Version

ScenarioLikely Outcome
Resident or fellowYes — lock in coverage early at lowest premium
Early-career attendingYes — peak earnings ahead, most to protect
Mid-career attendingYes — usually peak income years
Late-career attending (60+) with retirement assetsOften yes; may scale down if assets cover gap
Physician with substantial inherited wealthPossibly skip — but most still buy for the bad-year cushion

Your Income Is Your Largest Financial Asset

A 32-year-old internal medicine physician earning $260K/year has a future earned income of roughly $8 million over the remaining ~30 working years (without inflation adjustment). A surgical specialist earning $600K has a future earned income closer to $18 million. This future income stream is your single largest financial asset — far larger than your house, your investment portfolio, or any inheritance you might receive. And it's the only major asset that disappears entirely if you become disabled and can't work. Disability insurance is the only practical way to protect this asset. You can buy fire insurance for your $1 million house. You can't buy fire insurance on your $10 million future income stream — except through disability insurance.

The Probability vs. Cost Analysis

The actuarial reality: roughly 25% of working-age adults experience a long-term disability lasting 90+ days during their career. For physicians, the rate is somewhat different (different injury exposures, different health profiles) but the magnitude is similar. The premium: typically 1–3% of gross income for adequate individual DI coverage. A $400K-earning attending pays $4,000–$12,000/year — call it $8,000/year on average. Over a 30-year career, that's $240,000 of cumulative premium to protect a future income stream worth ~$12 million. The expected value math:
  • Probability of long-term disability claim during career: ~20–25%
  • Average DI claim duration: 8+ years
  • Average benefit paid during claim: $15K/month × 96 months = $1.44M
  • Expected claim payout: 0.22 × $1.44M = ~$317K
  • Premium paid: $240K
The expected value is positive even before considering risk reduction. And the variance reduction is what makes DI a no-brainer for almost any physician — you're trading a predictable small loss (premium) for protection against a catastrophic large loss (career-ending disability).

When DI Might Genuinely Not Be Necessary

A few narrow cases where disability insurance is genuinely optional:
  • Substantial inherited or accumulated wealth. If you have $5M+ in liquid assets and could live on investment income indefinitely, the income protection function of DI is less critical. Many wealthy physicians still buy DI as a "bad-year cushion" but at lower benefit amounts.
  • Late career, fully retired-ready. Physicians within 1–2 years of retirement, with retirement fully funded, can often stop new DI contributions without consequence. Coverage in place can be evaluated for continued value.
  • Severe pre-existing condition with no insurable income to protect. Some physicians can't qualify for coverage due to severe health history, and at very late career stages there may be no practical alternative.
For everyone else — and that's the overwhelming majority — disability insurance is among the highest-leverage financial decisions a physician makes. The cost is small relative to the protection.

Specialty-Specific Value

Higher-income specialties have proportionally more to protect, but they also pay more in premium. The "premium as % of income" ratio is roughly consistent across specialties (1–3%). Some specialties have specific considerations:
  • Surgical specialties have higher claim probability due to physical demands and procedural risks (sharp injuries, contagion exposure, repetitive strain). True own-occupation coverage is critical — a hand surgeon who can no longer operate but can teach has very different outcomes under true own-occupation vs. modified own-occupation language.
  • Procedural specialists (interventional cardiology, IR, GI) similarly benefit from true own-occupation.
  • Cognitive specialties (psychiatry, internal medicine, family medicine) have somewhat lower claim probability but face mental/nervous claim exposure that varies by carrier.
  • Anesthesiology, EM, and critical care have specific occupational exposures (sharps, infectious disease, burnout) that drive utilization.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the average claim duration for physicians?
Among long-term disability claims that exceed 90 days (i.e., make it past the elimination period), the average claim duration is approximately 8 years. Some claims resolve quickly; others continue to age 65 or 67. The "long tail" of multi-year claims is what makes DI valuable — those are the catastrophic financial events the policy protects against.
I have group LTD through my employer — isn't that enough?
Usually not. Group LTD is typically capped at 60% of base salary, taxable, with a weak "any occupation" definition after 24 months, and not portable if you change jobs. Group LTD is supplemental coverage; individual DI is the core protection. Layering both is what most physicians end up with.
What's the best age to buy disability insurance?
As early as you can — ideally during residency or fellowship. Premiums are based on age at issue, and your insurability locks in. A health condition that develops between age 28 and 35 won't affect the policy you bought at 28. Waiting is among the most expensive decisions in physician financial planning.
Is the COLA rider worth it?
For most physicians, yes. A disability claim that lasts 10+ years (common for permanent disabilities) loses meaningful real value if benefits are fixed in nominal dollars. The COLA rider increases benefits during a claim, typically by 3–6% annually. Costs 10–15% additional premium and roughly doubles the real value of long-duration claims.

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.

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