UNINSURED INCOME FORFEITED · SINCE PAGE LOAD
earner forfeits for every uninsured day of disability.
"The most expensive insurance decision a high-income professional makes is the one they defer."
EXHIBIT 1.1 — COVERAGE GAP ANALYSIS
Standard group LTD versus actual income trajectory
Source: Society of Actuaries long-term disability incidence data; LIMRA individual disability market survey; Shield internal case file analysis, 2023–2025. Income figures representative of 95th–99th percentile W-2 earners.
ANNUAL COMPENSATION
$2,400,000
Annual W-2 + 1099 combined
Academic medical center + private practice hybrid
Dual income streams — hospital W-2 and surgical center distributions — require two separate policy structures. Standard carriers cap individual DI at $15K/month regardless of total earnings. Own-occupation definition critical: total disability must be defined as inability to perform the specific surgical specialty, not medicine broadly.
"A hand surgeon who can still see patients but cannot operate is totally disabled. Most policies disagree."
COVERAGE ARCHITECTURE · ARCHETYPE I
CARRIER PANEL
The four structural defects in every standard disability policy above $500K income.
Standard individual disability insurance was designed for the $150K professional. At seven figures, the product breaks down across four dimensions — none of which appear on the policy summary page. Understanding these defects is the prerequisite to building coverage that actually works.
$20K/mo
Standard max benefit
vs. $200K actual
< 8%
Own-occ policies available
of group plans
100%
Non-W-2 coverage gap
standard carriers
74%
Offset clause prevalence
individual policies
The Own-Occupation Trap
Group LTD policies define disability as inability to perform "any occupation" for which you are qualified by education, training, or experience. A neurosurgeon who can no longer operate but could theoretically teach medicine receives nothing. Individual DI with true own-occupation language pays full benefit for inability to perform your specific specialty — regardless of other income.
The Income Definition Ceiling
Standard individual DI carriers underwrite to 60–70% of prior-year W-2 income, capped at $15,000–$20,000 per month. A physician earning $2.4M annually — $200K/month — receives a maximum $20K monthly benefit. That 10% replacement ratio is not a safety net; it is a floor drain.
The Non-W-2 Exclusion
Partnership K-1 distributions, carried interest, equity distributions, and 1099 consulting income are invisible to most underwriters. A private equity partner whose $5M annual comp is 90% carried interest can only insure the $500K salary draw. The other $4.5M is structurally uninsurable through standard channels — requiring surplus-lines placement with Lloyd's syndicates or specialty carriers.
The Group Plan Offset Clause
When individual DI is stacked on top of group LTD, most policies contain offset provisions that reduce individual benefits dollar-for-dollar against group plan payments. An earner who purchases $15K individual DI while covered by a $10K group plan receives $15K total — not $25K. Proper policy architecture sequences benefit periods and structures non-duplication clauses to preserve full stacking.
EXHIBIT 4.1 — CARRIER PANEL COMPARISON
Stacking architecture requires sequencing across three distinct market tiers.
Standard admitted carriers (Guardian, Mass Mutual, Principal) provide the foundation — true own-occupation language and guaranteed renewable terms. Surplus-lines carriers (Lloyd's syndicates) provide the height — unlimited benefit potential for complex comp structures. Specialty carriers bridge the equity layer. Each layer requires separate applications, separate underwriting, and coordinated non-duplication language.
Primary Layer
Admitted carriers · Own-occ · $20K cap
Surplus Layer
Lloyd's syndicates · No benefit ceiling · Annual terms
Equity Layer
Specialty carriers · RSU/carry · Actuarial review
CARRIER PANEL · SELECTED CHARACTERISTICS
| Carrier | Tier | Max Benefit | Non-W-2 |
|---|---|---|---|
Guardian Life Best-in-class own-occ language; strong residual rider | Primary Layer | $20,000/mo | — |
Mass Mutual Preferred for physicians; strong FIO rider | Primary Layer | $20,000/mo | — |
Berkshire Life Strong for legal professionals; K-1 partial recognition | Primary Layer | $20,000/mo | Limited |
Lloyd's Syndicates Required for income >$500K/mo; no standard market access | Surplus Layer | $100,000/mo | ✓ Full |
Specialty Risk Int'l RSU/carried interest structures; requires actuarial review | Equity Layer | Negotiated | ✓ Full |
EXHIBIT 4.2 — ANONYMIZED CASE STRUCTURES
Cardiothoracic surgeon, academic center + private cath lab
Placed 24-month post-engagement. Filed claim 14 months later — essential tremor. Full benefit paid.
Managing partner, Am Law 20 firm, New York
Partnership agreement restructured concurrent with placement. Buy-sell funded at $6.2M.
Co-founder, Series D SaaS, $180M valuation
Equity acceleration clause triggered at Series D close. Vesting protection structured via key-person overlay.
The Executive Disability Audit quantifies your exact coverage gap.
A 14-page analysis built for your specific income structure — not a generic brochure. The audit maps your current coverage against your actual earnings, identifies the structural defects in your existing policies, and models three coverage architectures with carrier comparisons and premium projections.
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