Short-Term vs. Long-Term Disability Insurance in Texas: Coverage, Costs, and How to Choose

Insurance advisor reviewing short term and long term disability coverage documents with a client in a professional office.
Short-Term vs Long-Term Disability Insurance in Texas | Wilkerson Insurance Agency

If you were injured tomorrow and could not work for six months, how long would your savings last? That question makes most Texas workers uncomfortable, and for good reason. Most people in the Lone Star State do not have a state-sponsored disability benefit to fall back on.

Unlike California, New York, or New Jersey, Texas does not operate a mandatory state disability program. That means if a serious illness or injury takes you out of work, private disability insurance is one of the few income protection tools available to you.

At Wilkerson Insurance Agency, we have helped thousands of Texas families and self-employed professionals navigate exactly this decision since 2010. One of the most common questions we hear is: “Do I need short-term or long-term disability coverage, and what is even the difference between them?”

What Is Short-Term Disability Insurance, and Who Needs It?

Short-term disability insurance replaces a portion of your income when a temporary illness or injury keeps you out of work. Most policies cover between 60% and 70% of your gross monthly income and pay benefits for three to six months, depending on the plan. For a deeper look at how these plans are structured, see our guide on understanding disability income plans as a key component of financial security.

How Short-Term Disability Works

The waiting period before benefits begin often called the elimination periodis relatively short. Most short-term policies require you to wait between seven and 30 days before your first payment. That brief window is manageable for someone with a few weeks of emergency savings, but it can feel long for workers living paycheck to paycheck.

Common reasons Texans file short-term disability claims include recovering from surgery, pregnancy complications, a serious but temporary illness, and injuries that sideline you for weeks but not permanently. If your employer offers this coverage as part of a group benefits package, count yourself fortunate. Many small business employees and self-employed Texans in Dallas, Farmers Branch, and across the DFW area have no such protection in place.

What Is Long-Term Disability Insurance, and When Does It Apply?

Long-term disability insurance picks up where short-term coverage ends. These policies are designed for conditions that last well beyond a few months, including chronic illnesses, serious musculoskeletal injuries, cancer treatment, or neurological conditions that make returning to your specific job difficult or impossible.

How Long-Term Disability Works

Benefit periods for long-term policies are measured in years, not months. Plans may pay benefits for two years, five years, ten years, or all the way to the Social Security retirement age, depending on the policy you select. The tradeoff is a longer elimination period, typically 90 to 180 days before benefits begin. Long-term policies generally replace around 60% of your gross income. That percentage matters a great deal when you consider that a disability lasting more than 90 days frequently stretches into years, not weeks.

I had a client in Plano, a general contractor in his early 40s, who broke his back in a fall. He assumed workers’ compensation would cover everything. It covered the work-related portion, but he had side projects and a small business that generated a significant part of his income. Long-term disability insurance was the only thing that protected that piece of his financial life for the 14 months he could not work. We talk about insurance in hypotheticals until it is not hypothetical anymore.

Wilkerson Insurance Agency, Client Case Study

The Social Security Administration estimates that roughly one in four 20-year-olds today will experience at least one year of disability before reaching retirement age.

Social Security Administration, Disability Statistics

Short-Term vs. Long-Term Disability: A Side-by-Side Comparison

This table summarizes the primary differences between the two plan types for Texas residents purchasing individual or group coverage. All figures are estimates. Individual policy terms vary by carrier, occupation, age, and health history.

Feature Short-Term Disability Long-Term Disability
Benefit Period 3 to 6 months (some up to 12 months) 2 years to retirement age
Elimination Period 7 to 30 days 90 to 180 days (90 days most common)
Income Replacement 60% to 70% of gross monthly income 50% to 60% of gross monthly income
Cost Estimate 1% to 3% of annual salary 1% to 3% of annual salary
Common Triggers Surgery, pregnancy, acute illness Chronic illness, severe injury, cancer, neurological conditions
Portability Varies; group plans often end with employment Individual plans follow you between jobs
Texas State Program None available None available

What Makes Texas Different for Disability Coverage?

Most Texans do not realize their state is one of the few in the country without a mandatory state disability insurance program. If you live and work in Texas and experience a disabling event, your income protection options are limited to employer-sponsored group coverage, individual policies you purchase privately, and Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI), which has a lengthy approval process and is designed for total, permanent disabilities.

Texas Regulatory Standard

Texas Administrative Code, Section 3.3075

Private disability income protection coverage sold in the state must meet minimum standards, including a periodic payment of at least $100 per month payable through age 62. But those are minimums. The policies we place for clients at Wilkerson Insurance Agency through carriers such as Mutual of Omaha, United American, and Transamerica go well beyond those floors.

No state safety net: This is why we frequently sit down with self-employed Texans, real estate professionals, and small business owners across DFW to review whether their current setup leaves any gaps. For someone with no employer benefits, no group plan, and no state safety net, a private short-term or long-term policy may be the only income protection they have. Our post on how small businesses benefit from group health insurance covers why employer-sponsored coverage matters so much in this context.

How Much Does Disability Insurance Typically Cost in Texas?

Both short-term and long-term disability policies generally cost between 1% and 3% of your annual income in premiums. For a full breakdown of what affects your rate, read our detailed resource on disability income insurance costs in Texas.

Cost Factors at a Glance
1%–3%

Estimated annual premium as a percentage of your gross income for either plan type.

$750–$2,250

Estimated annual cost for a 35-year-old professional earning $75,000/yr on a long-term policy.

90 days

Extending elimination period from 30 to 90 days can meaningfully reduce your annual premium cost.

A shorter elimination period means faster benefits but higher premiums. For many of our clients, extending to 90 days makes sense if they have three months of emergency savings set aside. If you are thinking about how to build that financial cushion alongside your coverage, our guide on how much to contribute to an HSA in Texas is a useful companion read.

Unsure what a disability income plan would cost for your situation?

Request a free quote or call us for a no-pressure comparison across multiple top-rated carriers.

Call (214) 501-9613 →

Should You Have Both Short-Term and Long-Term Disability Insurance?

For many Texans, the smartest answer is yes, and here is why. These two plan types are designed to work together, not compete with each other. Short-term disability handles the first three to six months when your savings would otherwise drain fast. Long-term disability takes over if the condition extends beyond what short-term coverage handles. Our guide on how to choose the best disability income plan in Dallas walks through this decision framework in detail.

That said, not everyone needs both. The right combination depends on three things:

Your Emergency Savings

If you have six or more months of expenses saved, you may be comfortable absorbing a 90-day elimination period on a long-term policy without short-term coverage. Pairing a solid emergency fund with an HSA plan is one way some of our clients bridge that gap cost-effectively.

Your Employer Benefits

Some employers offer short-term disability as a group benefit. In that case, individual long-term coverage fills the gap. Our post on what open enrollment means for small business owners and their employees explains how to evaluate what your current employer plan actually covers.

Your Income and Financial Obligations

A self-employed contractor in Carrollton or a freelance consultant in Dallas with a mortgage and dependents carries far more risk than someone with a working spouse and significant savings. When I meet with a new client, these are the three factors we work through first. There is no universal answer, but there is usually a clear answer for each individual once we look at the full picture.

Why Wilkerson Insurance Agency Is the Right Choice for Disability Income Coverage in Texas

Since 2010, Wilkerson Insurance Agency has been helping Texans protect their income with the right disability coverage. As an independent agency, we compare plans from multiple top carriers to find the best solution for your specific needs and budget.

Independent Brokerage

We shop and compare disability plans from several leading carriers instead of offering only one company’s products, so you get unbiased options that truly match your situation.

Over 15 Years of Experience

Our team has real-world experience helping clients through actual claims, giving you practical advice based on what works in Texas—not just what sounds good on paper.

More Than 2,000 Clients Served

We have worked with Texans from many different occupations and income levels, so we understand the unique protection needs across the state.

No-Obligation Consultations

You can speak with us and get honest answers without any pressure or cost. Our only goal is to find the coverage that best protects your income.

Local DFW Office, Statewide Service

Based in Farmers Branch, we serve clients throughout Texas with convenient local support and licensed agents who know the Texas market.

Wide Carrier Variety

We offer flexible plans from respected companies like Mutual of Omaha, Transamerica, and United American so you see every available option for your occupation and income level.

Our office is located at 2727 LBJ Freeway, Suite 1062, Farmers Branch, TX 75234. Call us at 214-501-9613 or visit wilkersoninsuranceagency.com to get a free, no-obligation quote today.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Texas have state-funded short-term disability insurance?+
No, Texas does not operate a state-funded disability insurance program. Texans who need income protection during a disability must rely on employer group coverage, a private individual policy, or Social Security Disability Insurance. This makes private disability coverage especially important for self-employed Texans and those without employer benefits. For more common questions about insurance coverage in the state, visit our health insurance FAQs for Texas.
What is the elimination period, and how does it affect my coverage?+
The elimination period is the waiting time between the start of your disability and when your first benefit payment arrives. Short-term policies typically have elimination periods of 7 to 30 days. Long-term policies commonly use 90 days as the standard, though 60-day and 180-day options exist. A longer elimination period generally lowers your premium but requires you to cover more expenses out of pocket before benefits begin. The Texas Department of Insurance provides consumer guidance on how elimination periods and minimum benefit standards are regulated in the state.
Can I get disability insurance if I am self-employed in Texas?+
Yes, and it is one of the most important financial protections for self-employed Texans. Without an employer providing group coverage, a private individual disability income policy may be your only income protection if you cannot work. Carriers like Mutual of Omaha and Transamerica offer individual policies designed for self-employed professionals, and benefit amounts can be structured around your actual income. Our full guide on smart health insurance choices for self-employed workers in Dallas covers how to approach your entire coverage picture as someone without employer benefits.
What is the difference between “own occupation” and “any occupation” disability definitions?+
An “own occupation” policy pays benefits if you cannot perform the duties of your specific job, even if you could theoretically work in a different role. An “any occupation” policy only pays if you cannot perform any type of work. Own-occupation policies offer stronger protection, particularly for professionals in specialized fields, and typically carry higher premiums. Most long-term individual policies start with an own-occupation standard and may shift to any-occupation after a defined period.
How does short-term disability insurance interact with workers’ compensation in Texas?+
Workers’ compensation covers injuries that occur on the job or directly as a result of work activities. Short-term disability insurance covers a broader set of conditions—including illnesses, off-the-job injuries, and pregnancy complications—that may not qualify under workers’ comp. They serve different purposes and, in many cases, can both apply depending on the nature of the event. The Social Security Administration’s disability resource page outlines how federal SSDI interacts with private coverage and what the qualification thresholds look like if a long-term disability extends beyond private policy limits.

Find Out Exactly What Protecting Your Income Would Cost

Call us or request a free quote online. No obligation, no pressure—just honest answers for your situation.

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LeRoy Wilkerson

LeRoy Wilkerson is the founder of Wilkerson Insurance Agency, an independent health insurance agency serving the
Dallas - Fort Worth community since 2010. He leads with a simple philosophy: educate first, advocate always. Every client starts with a discovery consultation so LeRoy can understand their goals, budget, and coverage needs, then he helps them
navigate plans and benefits - truly "Taking the Hell out of Health Insurance."

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