Disability Insurance Gap: $10,000 Monthly Income, High Earner
With $10,000 monthly income, a 60% replacement goal, and $2,000 in existing coverage, you need $4,000 more in monthly disability benefits.
How to use this tool
- Enter your gross monthly income.
- Choose the percentage of income you'd want to replace if disabled (often 60-70%).
- Enter any disability coverage you already have, such as employer LTD.
- Read the monthly gap to insure and check it against your essential expenses.
Calculate the disability insurance coverage gap for a high earner with $10,000 monthly income and partial group coverage.
Frequently asked questions
- How much disability insurance do I need?
- A common target is to replace 60-70% of your gross income. Subtract any employer or group coverage you already have to find the gap a supplemental policy should fill.
- Isn't my employer's coverage enough?
- Often not. Employer LTD frequently replaces a smaller percentage, caps the benefit, and ends if you leave the job. Compare it to your essential expenses to see whether it truly covers the basics.
- Are disability benefits taxable?
- It depends who paid the premium. Benefits from a policy you paid for with after-tax dollars are generally tax-free; benefits from employer-paid coverage are usually taxable.