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Insurance literacy

Income protection — UK complete guide 2026/27

The most-undersold insurance product in the UK. Life insurance pays out if you die; income protection pays out if you can't work due to illness or injury — and for most UK workers, the second event is roughly 10 times more likely. Yet only ~9% of UK workers have it. The right policy pays around 50-70% of your salary for years if you're seriously ill, costs £15-£50/month for a 30-year-old, and dramatically de-risks the biggest financial threat most working-age adults face.

Educational only. Insurance product design varies between providers. Always read the policy document and consider independent advice. Not financial advice.

Why income protection matters more than life insurance for most

Common UK retail insurance priorities go: life insurance first, critical illness second, income protection third. For most working-age adults this order is backwards. Compare the probabilities at age 40:

Income protection insures against the more probable bad outcome. It pays a monthly income (typically 50-70% of pre-tax salary) if you can't work due to illness or injury, after a "deferred period" and until either you can work again, the "benefit period" ends, or you reach retirement age.

For someone in their 30s earning £40,000 with a mortgage and family, the financial impact of a 5-year disability is typically far greater than the financial impact of death — you still need to eat, pay the mortgage, support the family. Death triggers life insurance + estate; disability with no IP triggers Statutory Sick Pay (£118.75/week for 28 weeks max, then Employment and Support Allowance at £90-£138/week). That's about £5,000 a year vs your £40,000 salary.

How income protection works

The basic structure:

  1. You insure a percentage of your pre-tax salary (typically 50-70%)
  2. If you become unable to work due to illness/injury, you make a claim
  3. After the deferred period (typically 4-26 weeks), the insurer starts paying your monthly benefit
  4. Payments continue until you can work again, the benefit period ends, or you reach the policy end date (usually retirement age)
  5. Payments are tax-free (since premiums are paid from post-tax income)

"Cannot work" is defined by the policy — this definition is the single most important policy term.

Own occupation vs any occupation — the most important policy term

This determines when you can claim:

Own Occupation (best definition)

You can claim if you can't perform YOUR specific job. A surgeon who develops tremor can claim — even though they could theoretically do administrative work. A construction worker with a bad back can claim — even if they could sit at a desk.

This is the strongest definition. It's also the most expensive. Look for it; pay for it.

Suited Occupation (compromise)

You can claim if you can't perform any job suited to your training, qualifications and experience. Slightly weaker than own occupation but stronger than any occupation.

Any Occupation (worst definition)

You can claim only if you can't perform ANY job — including jobs you're overqualified or unsuited for. The same surgeon with tremor wouldn't be able to claim, because they could theoretically work as a hospital receptionist.

"Any occupation" policies are cheap, but the claim outcome is much weaker. Most UK retail income protection policies use "own occupation" by default; older or cheaper policies sometimes use "any occupation" — check the policy document.

Activities of Daily Living (ADL) policies

A handful of policies pay based on your ability to perform basic activities (walking, bathing, dressing, eating, transferring). These are often sold cheaply but have very narrow trigger criteria — you essentially need to be severely disabled to claim. Avoid for working-age cover unless that's your specific need.

Deferred period — how long until payments start

The "deferred period" (or "waiting period") is how long you must be unable to work before the policy starts paying. Standard options:

Deferred period When to use Cost vs 26-wk baseline
4 weeksSelf-employed or no employer sick pay+50-80%
13 weeks (3 months)Employer pays 3 months full salary+20-30%
26 weeks (6 months)Standard; employer pays 6 months sick pay (NHS, civil service)Baseline
52 weeks (1 year)Generous employer sick pay (12 months full pay)-15-25%

The deferred period should match your existing sick pay protection. If your employer gives 6 months full pay then nothing, a 26-week deferred period transitions seamlessly. If you're self-employed with no sick pay, 4-13 weeks is appropriate.

Benefit period — how long payments last

Three main options:

For a properly protective policy, "to retirement" is the right choice. Short-term policies cost roughly 60-70% of long-term policy premiums — you save 30-40% on premium for vastly weaker cover.

Typical 2026/27 costs

Indicative monthly premiums for income protection covering 50-60% of salary, 26-week deferred period, to retirement at 65, own occupation:

Age Occupation Salary £30k/yr Salary £60k/yr
30Office worker£15-25/mo£30-50/mo
30Construction / manual£35-60/mo£70-120/mo
40Office worker£25-40/mo£50-80/mo
40Construction / manual£60-100/mo£120-200/mo
50Office worker£45-75/mo£90-150/mo

Cost drivers: age (premiums roughly double per decade), occupation (manual / dangerous occupations cost 2-4x desk jobs), health (smokers, BMI >30, family history of cancer/heart disease all add 20-50% loading), cover level (60% costs more than 50%), policy term.

Key UK providers (2026/27)

Provider Notes
VitalityWellness-linked discounts; comprehensive own-occupation; good claims-paying record
Legal & GeneralLargest UK protection insurer; good cover at competitive prices; own-occupation standard
Royal LondonMutual; well-regarded for income protection definitions and claims
LV= (Liverpool Victoria)Strong income protection range; standalone IP available without bundling
AvivaComprehensive; standard own-occupation; integrated with mortgage protection
The ExeterSpecialist in income protection; strong reputation for definitions
Holloway FriendlyMutual; specialist in protection for self-employed and tradespeople

How to buy income protection

Three main routes:

1. Whole-of-market protection adviser (recommended)

An independent protection adviser will compare policies across the market and recommend the best fit for your circumstances. They're paid by commission from the insurer (no fee to you typically). Look for:

Advisers add real value for income protection because the policy definitions matter so much — they know which insurers have stricter or more lenient claim definitions for specific conditions.

2. Comparison sites (execution-only)

MoneySuperMarket, Compare The Market, Confused.com etc. let you compare quotes directly. Cheaper but no advice; you're responsible for matching the policy to your needs.

Best for confident buyers who understand the policy terms.

3. Direct from the insurer

Vitality, L&G, Aviva etc. sell direct. Sometimes slightly cheaper than via comparison sites; sometimes the same. No independent advice.

Common exclusions to watch

The "back and mental health" point matters: these two cause most claims in the UK. A policy that doesn't cover them is not really income protection — it's just back-and-mental-health-excluded protection. Look for full cover.

Tax treatment

The tax-free benefit on personally-paid IP is one reason 50-70% of salary is the typical cover level — tax-free 60% is roughly equivalent to taxable 80-90% for a higher-rate taxpayer.

Employer cover vs personal cover

Many UK employers offer "Group Income Protection" via a workplace benefit scheme. This is typically:

Group cover is valuable but rarely sufficient as your only protection. Reasons to top up with personal cover:

Best practice: take group cover from employer + personal "tier 2" cover that supplements it (different deferred period or different benefit terms).

UK insurance claims experience — the real numbers

ABI annual statistics on UK protection insurance claims (most recent year):

The 95%+ payout rate for honestly-completed applications is reassuring. The horror stories of insurance claim refusals usually involve material non-disclosure at application stage. Disclose everything honestly — the underwriter would rather charge a higher premium upfront than refuse a legitimate claim later.

Decision framework

You definitely need IP if you...

You can probably skip IP if you...

Frequently asked questions

Should I get IP before life insurance?

For most UK working-age adults with dependants, yes — IP protects against the more likely bad outcome. But the affordability balance matters: if you can only afford one, prioritise based on your specific circumstances. If you have ample savings to cover several years of expenses, life cover may be the higher priority.

Will my policy cover redundancy?

No. Income protection covers inability to work due to illness or injury, not unemployment. Separate "redundancy cover" or "MPPI" (Mortgage Payment Protection Insurance) products exist for unemployment cover, with different terms.

What if I'm self-employed and my income varies?

Most insurers will use an average of your last 2-3 years' earnings as the basis for the benefit. Provide tax returns (SA302) showing your income history at application. The benefit level is locked at application time; if your income drops later, the benefit stays but the cover may exceed allowable cover ratios.

Does IP cover stress or mental health?

Most modern UK IP policies cover stress, depression, anxiety and other mental health conditions fully — on the same own-occupation basis. This is critical because mental health is one of the largest claim categories. Older or cheaper policies sometimes excluded mental health; check before buying.

What's "linked claims" and why does it matter?

If you claim once, recover, then have to claim again within 12 months for a related condition, "linked claims" wording can mean you don't have to wait through the deferred period again. Important for chronic or recurring conditions. Better policies have generous linked claims terms.

Are premiums guaranteed or reviewable?

Many UK IP policies have "reviewable" premiums — the insurer can increase them at periodic reviews (typically every 5 years). "Guaranteed" premium policies cost more initially but the price doesn't change. For long-term cover (to retirement), guaranteed premiums protect against future price hikes; worth the premium difference for many buyers.

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