Disability Insurance: “I Broke My Leg and Can’t Train: Income Protection for Instructors.”

I was spotting a heavy squat. The client bailed, and the bar crashed onto my tibia. I couldn’t walk, let alone train, for 12 weeks. My liability insurance defended me against the client (who was fine), but it paid me zero dollars for my lost income. I burned through my savings in month one.

Key Takeaways

  • Liability vs. Disability: Liability protects your assets from lawsuits. Disability protects your income from injury. They are opposites.
  • Workers Comp: If you are Self-Employed, you likely don’t have Workers Comp unless you bought it.
  • “Own Occupation” Definition: You need a policy that pays if you can’t be a Trainer. Some cheap policies only pay if you can’t do any job (like answering phones), so they won’t pay you because you can still sit at a desk.
  • Waiting Period: Most policies have a 7-30 day waiting period (Elimination Period) before checks start.

The “Why”: The Physical Labor Trap

The Trap:
Your body is your business.
If you break a leg, revenue hits $0 immediately.
You need Short-Term Disability (STD) or Accident Insurance.
Standard “Business Interruption” insurance (part of a BOP) requires property damage (fire), not bodily injury. It won’t help here.

The Investigation: I Quoted 3 Options

1. Breeze / Assurity

  • My Analysis: They offer “Income Protection” for freelancers. I quoted a policy for a 30-year-old trainer. For ~$40/month, I could get $2,000/month in benefits if injured.
  • Pros: Fast online quote.

2. AFLAC (Accident Indemnity)

  • My Analysis: Not true income replacement, but it pays cash lumps sums. “Broken Leg = $2,500 check.”
  • Pros: Fast cash to pay rent. No waiting period for the accident payout.

3. Northwestern Mutual

  • My Analysis: Long-Term Disability (LTD). This is for career-ending injuries. It’s expensive and takes weeks to underwrite (medical exams), but essential for long-term security.

[IMAGE: Graphic showing “Income Gap” during recovery with and without insurance]

Comparison Table: Income Protection

TypePays For…CostWaiting Period
Short-Term DisabilityMonthly Income7-14 Days
Accident PlanLump Sum Cash$None
Workers CompMedical + Income $None

Step-by-Step Action Plan

  1. Build an Emergency Fund: 3 months of expenses. Insurance takes time to pay.
  2. Buy Accident Insurance: It’s cheap and pays immediately for breaks/tears.
  3. Check “Own Occ”: Ensure your Disability policy defines your job as “Physical Trainer.”
  4. Consider Workers Comp: Even if solo, buying a “Ghost Policy” or coverage for yourself can cover medical bills + wages, though it’s pricey.

FAQ

Does health insurance cover lost wages?
No. Never.

Can I train on crutches?
Maybe, but if you trip and hurt a client, your liability insurance might say you were “impaired” and deny the claim.

Is this tax deductible?
If you deduct the premiums, the payout is taxable. If you pay with post-tax dollars, the payout is tax-free. (Consult CPA).

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