Your benefit period is how long your disability insurance policy will keep paying you after a claim is approved.
You might think it covers you “until you’re better,” but it’s actually based on time—not recovery.
Once you’re approved, the insurance company will pay your monthly benefit as long as you’re disabled—up to the limit you selected in your policy.
Here are the most common benefit periods doctors and dentists choose:
Example:
If you’re 34 and you choose a policy that pays to age 67, that means if you become disabled, benefits could be paid for up to 33 years if you suffer a career-ending disability.
Short-term disability coverage (like 2 or 5 years) can leave a big gap if you suffer a long-term or permanent condition. For high-income professionals like doctors and dentists, a career-ending disability can mean losing millions in future earnings.
That’s why most medical professionals choose a policy that pays until at least age 65 or 67—the age when you’d typically retire.
Yes—if you recover from one condition and return to work, your benefit period resets.
So if you become disabled again years later, you can file a new claim and receive benefits for a new full benefit period, based on your policy terms.
If you recover before the benefit period ends, your payments stop when you go back to work. You’re not locked into the full period—it’s simply the maximum length of time the insurance will pay.
Ask yourself:
In general, choose the longest benefit period you can afford. It gives you more protection and more peace of mind.
Your career is your biggest asset. A long benefit period means you won’t run out of income if something happens.
Most physicians and dentists choose coverage that lasts to age 65 or 67 to make sure their income is protected all the way through retirement.
Want help picking the right benefit period? Click below to get a free quote.
Get a personalized side-by-side policy comparison of the leading disability insurance companies from an independent insurance broker.