What is the difference between short-term and long-term income protection?
Short-term income protection pays benefits for a limited period, usually 12 or 24 months per claim. Once the benefit period expires, payments stop even if you are still unable to work. It is cheaper and often easier to obtain.
Long-term income protection pays for as long as you remain unable to work, potentially to your retirement age (typically 60, 65, or 68). It is more expensive but provides comprehensive protection against prolonged illness or disability.
Short-term income protection explained
- Benefit period: Typically 12 or 24 months per claim
- Deferred period: Often day one or 1–4 weeks
- Underwriting: Often simplified with fewer health questions
- Cost: Approximately 30–50% cheaper than equivalent long-term cover
- Incapacity definition: May use a less favourable definition like suited occupation
The main advantage is affordability. The main disadvantage is the cliff-edge when payments stop — if your illness extends beyond the benefit period, you lose protection when you need it most.
Long-term income protection explained
- Benefit period: Until recovery, retirement age, or death
- Deferred period: Typically 4 weeks to 12 months (your choice)
- Underwriting: Full medical underwriting with detailed health questions
- Incapacity definition: Usually offers own occupation, the most favourable definition
Particularly valuable for conditions lasting years: cancer recovery, serious mental health conditions, progressive neurological conditions, and major musculoskeletal problems.
💡 Insurance industry data shows the average income protection claim lasts approximately five to six years. A short-term policy covering 12–24 months would leave you without income for the majority of a typical claim. Long-term cover provides protection for the full duration.
Cost comparison
Indicative comparison for a 35-year-old non-smoking office worker seeking £2,000/month benefit:
- Short-term (12 months, 4-week deferred): £20–£35/month
- Short-term (24 months, 4-week deferred): £25–£45/month
- Long-term (to age 65, 8-week deferred): £40–£60/month
- Long-term (to age 65, 26-week deferred): £25–£40/month
A long-term policy with a 26-week deferred period can cost similar to a short-term policy with 4 weeks, while providing vastly superior long-term protection.
Which should you choose?
Long-term is better if: you have a mortgage or significant commitments, you are the primary earner, your employer offers limited long-term sick pay, or you want comprehensive protection.
Short-term may be adequate if: you have substantial savings, your employer offers generous long-term sick pay or ill-health retirement, you cannot afford long-term cover, or you need cover for a specific finite period.
⚠️ If choosing between no income protection and short-term, short-term is always better than nothing. However, if your budget allows, long-term cover provides fundamentally better protection against the most financially devastating scenarios.
Can you combine both types?
A layered approach combines a short-term policy with a long-term policy with a longer deferred period. For example, short-term covering months 1–12 paired with long-term starting after 12 months. This can be cheaper than a single long-term policy with a short deferred period while providing continuous cover.
Get expert help choosing the right cover
The right choice depends on your income, debts, employer benefits, savings, and family situation. Nesto matches you with experienced income protection advisers who can analyse your circumstances and recommend the most appropriate and affordable solution.