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Disability Income Insurance For Kroger Employees


What Is Disability Income Insurance?

Disability income insurance provides payments in the event that an illness or injury prevents you from working and earning a living. Disability income insurance, like all insurance, is meant to shield you from monetary misfortune. When you are unable to work, the majority of disability policies provide you with a benefit that replaces half to seventy percent of your earned income.

Caution:  If you work part-time, work in a hazardous occupation, or are self-employed, you may have a hard time buying a private disability policy. If you can purchase one, it will likely be expensive. You may have to rely on your group employer or association-issued disability policies. (See Questions & Answers.)

Nonworking Individuals

You can still require disability income insurance if you don't work because you live off of your investments or because you retired from Kroger early. When you become ill or injured, your income might not change significantly, but your expenses might. You might require part-time assistance or 24-hour medical attention in addition to specialized equipment. You might also have to pay hefty deductibles from your medical insurance. You can put a financial strain on your family if you don't have enough money saved or income to cover such expenses. However, many policies might not pay benefits unless a handicap causes an income loss.

Caution:  Disability income insurance is intended to replace the income you lose as a result of not being able to work and retain your present lifestyle, therefore you could find it difficult or impossible to purchase an individual disability policy that will pay benefits if you don't work. Additionally, since your investment income stream won't alter, the insurance company believes you have no financial incentive to recover. Purchasing an association policy, if one is available, or purchasing a policy prior to your retirement from Kroger might be your only options (unless your disability payments terminate at retirement). Even if you are eligible for a disability income policy, you should carefully examine it to find out if benefits will be paid to a non-working individual at the time of incapacity.

Business Owners and Employers

Disability insurance offers multiple protections for business owners. To secure your personal income, you might first get an individual disability coverage. Secondly, you can get key person insurance, which shields you from the effects of losing a valuable employee on your company. Third, in order to lower your income taxes and safeguard important personnel at the same time, you can get insurance to pay for a salary continuation program. Fourth, you may make sure that your company will continue to function even in the event of your illness by getting business overhead expense insurance. In the event that your partner becomes disabled, you can purchase your spouse's business interest by purchasing a disability insurance policy.

Caution:  The definitions of disability provided by the government could be far more stringent than those provided by private insurance. For instance, your illness or injury must be tied to your job in order to qualify for benefits under workers' compensation. Pay particular attention to how the insurance policy or source defines disability while examining what coverage you might be entitled to in the event that you become handicapped.

You Apply for Benefits, Then Wait

Once you become disabled and apply for benefits, you have to wait for a certain amount of time after the onset of your disability before you receive them. For any Kroger employees applying for benefits under a private insurance policy, this amount of time (called the elimination period) ranges from 30 to 720 days, although the most common period is 90 days. For any Kroger employees applying for benefits under a type of social insurance, your waiting period may be over six months (for Social Security). After you satisfy the elimination period, you will begin receiving a monthly disability benefit that usually replaces 50 to 70 percent of your earned income.

You Receive Benefits, But Not Usually Forever

Lifetime coverage is guaranteed by private disability insurance policies, but they come at a high cost. The majority of people purchase long-term insurance, which pays benefits for many years or until age 65, or short-term insurance, which pays benefits for up to two years. Many diseases and injuries, in reality, may not render you permanently incapacitated; during a period of rehabilitation, you might be able to resume part-time or full-time employment. The majority of social and private insurance schemes encourage you to return to work by either continuously reevaluating your disability or by providing you full or partial benefits while you attempt to work. Furthermore, they typically cover the cost of any rehabilitation or training you require to assist you return to the workforce.

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Example(s):  Clark is in considerable pain. Five months after his injury, he gets Social Security disability benefits. After a year, he wants to return to his job but is unsure if he can continue to support himself as a carpenter. Clark is allowed to return to work for a nine-month trial term without losing any of his benefits, according to work incentives set up by the Social Security Administration. After that time, Clark discovered he could go back to work as a carpenter, and his disability benefits were terminated.

Strengths of Disability Income Insurance

Can Protect A Disabled Person From Financial Ruin

People typically get life insurance to give money for their surviving loved ones and property and casualty insurance to safeguard their assets, such as homes, vehicles, and furniture. But a lot of people don't consider using disability insurance to safeguard their income. But how well could you subsist without your salary? Being disabled is an unpredictable event that will, at the very least, temporarily limit your ability to earn a living. What would happen if you were unable to work for months or even years, even if you might have enough money in the bank to cover your immediate needs? The potential of disability insurance to safeguard you over time is what gives it its true value.

Individual Policies Can Be Tailored to Meet Individual Needs

Government disability insurance schemes are meant to serve the requirements of the majority, therefore they are typically rigid; however, private individual policies can be customized to fit your specific needs.

Example(s):  Mr. Mason has adequate savings to meet his income needs for six months in the event he becomes disabled, so he buys a disability insurance policy with a 180-day elimination period that will pay him benefits for two years. However, his next-door neighbor Mr. Dixon wants his disability benefits to begin sooner and last longer, so he buys a policy with a 30-day elimination period that will pay him benefits until he is age 65, if necessary.

Tradeoffs of Disability Insurance

Individual Policies Can Be Expensive

If you ask someone why they don't have a personal disability income insurance coverage, they'll probably tell you that it's because it's too costly. Quality individual disability policies are far more expensive, even while you pay for government insurance through your taxes and your company might partially cover the cost of a group disability policy. A single policy's cost can be attempted to be decreased by shortening the benefit duration, lengthening the elimination period, or removing features that you had initially desired. If a Kroger employee performs this, though, you can wind up with a policy that isn't suitable for your needs.

Disability Claims Can Be Hard to Evaluate

Your insurance company will request a copy of the police report as evidence of damage if you are involved in an automobile accident, and you will get a payment in the mail within a few days or weeks. Should you pass away, your insurance provider will request a copy of your death certificate from your beneficiary, and your claim should be processed expeditiously. In the event that you become incapacitated, however, you will not only need to demonstrate that you were harmed or ill, but also that your condition is anticipated to persist after your elimination time. This implies that you will have to wait (often for months) before receiving any money from the insurance company, and your disability will need to be validated by a doctor. Furthermore, although certain claims are straightforward to assess, others—particularly those pertaining to mental illness—are trickier.

Disability Insurance Is Complex

The complexity of human demands makes disability insurance, both commercial and public, difficult. Furthermore, sickness and injuries might happen at any time. Governments and insurance providers have responded by creating insurance plans that contain numerous limitations and, in the case of individual disability insurance, a wide range of possibilities. When buying a disability policy, you might have to take your time assessing your needs going forward and balancing your desire for coverage with what you can afford to buy. After that, you'll need to evaluate several insurance and ascertain the coverage you currently have access to via the government or your job.

Questions & Answers

If You Begin Receiving Social Security Disability Benefits, Why Do You Receive A Reduced Benefit From Your Individual Disability Income Insurance Policy?

Disability insurance is designed to protect your earned income, not to pay you extra income in the event you become disabled. Because insurance companies know that you may (but often do not) collect other disability benefits, they usually give you the option of buying a rider (in your case, a Social Security offset rider) to your policy that will pay extra benefits to you before benefits begin or if Social Security denies your claim. However, if you do receive Social Security benefits, your policy benefit will be reduced proportionately.

If You Are Self-Employed or Work Part-Time, Why Is It Difficult to Purchase Disability Income Insurance?

If you work for yourself, you can find it difficult to purchase a disability income insurance policy if you have irregular income or haven't been worked for a long time. This makes it harder to calculate your risk of incapacity and how much income you'll need to replace, which could put the insurance company at risk. But if you've been in business for two or three years and can demonstrate that you make more than a particular amount annually—typically $12,000—you ought to be able to get approved for disability insurance. It could be challenging for you to purchase a coverage if you work part-time because many insurance companies demand that you work more than a specific number of hours and make more than a specific annual income in order to be eligible for disability insurance.

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For more information you can reach the plan administrator for Kroger at 104 vine street Cincinnati, OH 45202-1100; or by calling them at 513-762-4000.

Company:
Kroger*

Plan Administrator:
104 vine street
Cincinnati, OH
45202-1100
513-762-4000

*Please see disclaimer for more information